This was originally a piece of labour flyposting that I cut and pasted into something more useful. This was a tricky one to do as a policeman was standing just left of me at the time, but there not the most observant of creatures. I enjoy taking down these political pollutions as they dominate the landscape suggesting choice to the suggestible and arent taken down by their owners within sufficient time. I once put up posters declaring my interest in getting commissions for artwork and a policeman followed me as I put them up and he took them all down. I can only assume from his actions that it is ok for us to pull down advertising.
Saturday, May 13, 2006
theres always a choice
This was originally a piece of labour flyposting that I cut and pasted into something more useful. This was a tricky one to do as a policeman was standing just left of me at the time, but there not the most observant of creatures. I enjoy taking down these political pollutions as they dominate the landscape suggesting choice to the suggestible and arent taken down by their owners within sufficient time. I once put up posters declaring my interest in getting commissions for artwork and a policeman followed me as I put them up and he took them all down. I can only assume from his actions that it is ok for us to pull down advertising.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
4 comments:
At the side of your blog you list an amazing amount of interests and activities. If you could do one thing, take on one job, what would it be?
As each skill is linked to the next I would be unwilling to pick one as my definitive interest. But saying that, at this moment I'd say I'm enjoying making music on the laptop the most but I feel my constant hatred of cars and any other transport eclipses this and so pedestrian is my calling. I'd prefer no job so that I could develop more skills.
There's no point in skills unless you do something with them, hence job - I do not mean an oppressive job in the sense of what someone in a suit is telling you what to do.
Youve lost me, jobs don't enrich and develop skills they formulate and channel your aptitude into comparitively meaningless activity. The most important reason for skills is surely survival not status and all a job can inevitably offer is the latter. I believe that the workplace is an unecessary distraction from real life and real development. The whole reason for learning skills is primarily for yourself and past that your children, whether or not you want to be generous enough to pass them on to others is your decision but it certainly is not a right. You seem to have a lack of confidence maybe with your belief in your own skills, and you might be seekig validation from a job that you are not wasting time, but you know that this life has no plot or set route so a job is always an enticing choice as it offers identity and satisfaction but I believe that this can only come from within. I hope that you develop skills and keep them deliberately away from public consciousness because you cannot use your whole skill base as currency otherwise you will have no ownership over your life.
Post a Comment