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Jim Carrey’s Advice

Comments

  • It's always nice to have these reminders pop up. Thanks for posting.

  • There's some gold nuggets there.

  • I love the sentiment of this, but I can’t help thinking it’s all very easy to say and even do from a position immense wealth and the freedom it brings.

  • @henryo said:
    I love the sentiment of this, but I can’t help thinking it’s all very easy to say and even do from a position immense wealth and the freedom it brings.

    ^ this.

  • edited October 2022

    @henryo said:
    I love the sentiment of this, but I can’t help thinking it’s all very easy to say and even do from a position immense wealth and the freedom it brings.

    I agree in that I think this is much easier said and done for a younger person who aspires only to make him/herself stand out, rather than lead the typical family life that has has been drilled into them to want, but it does seem he’s talking to a graduate crowd. And that it’s immensely easier to do when you are something like a 1 in 20 million talent (just estimating here) in your field.

    I also think it’s a little cynical that you brush off the idea of finding success and being yourself in life because it’s coming from a person who has succeeded wildly at it. I’m happy to see Carrey trying to be positive again, because for a few years there he was wrecked and trying way too hard to cope with the suicide of his girlfriend in a way that just wasn’t giving him results.

    Overall, it’s a good, if trite, message that doesn’t necessarily have to be taken at the level of finding immense fame and job/wealth security. I’d rather watch 8 minutes of someone trying to spread positivity over cynicism.

  • be inspired by a person's actions rather than their words.

  • @monz0id said:

    @henryo said:
    I love the sentiment of this, but I can’t help thinking it’s all very easy to say and even do from a position immense wealth and the freedom it brings.

    ^ this.

    It’s true but also wealth and power can be a ‘self’ imposed prison too, albeit a comfortable one.

  • edited October 2022

    @oat_phipps said:

    @henryo said:
    I love the sentiment of this, but I can’t help thinking it’s all very easy to say and even do from a position immense wealth and the freedom it brings.

    I agree in that I think this is much easier said and done for a younger person who aspires only to make him/herself stand out, rather than lead the typical family life that has has been drilled into them to want, but it does seem he’s talking to a graduate crowd. And that it’s immensely easier to do when you are something like a 1 in 20 million talent (just estimating here) in your field.

    I also think it’s a little cynical that you brush off the idea of finding success and being yourself in life because it’s coming from a person who has succeeded wildly at it. I’m happy to see Carrey trying to be positive again, because for a few years there he was wrecked and trying way too hard to cope with the suicide of his girlfriend in a way that just wasn’t giving him results.

    Overall, it’s a good, if trite, message that doesn’t necessarily have to be taken at the level of finding immense fame and job/wealth security. I’d rather watch 8 minutes of someone trying to spread positivity over cynicism.

    I don't think what I said is cynical, I think that you and I heard completely different messages in what he said.

    I didn't hear anything about being successful, finding success, standing out, finding immense fame/wealth or anything else about making these kind of things happen. Quite the opposite.

    The message I took from this (and other interviews/talks I've heard from him in recent years) is that none of it matters. The wealth, the fame, the person that you've carved yourself out to be or moulded yourself into in this life, none of it is important and that trying to keep up with the untrue you is causing damage to your true self and spiritual being.

    The message I heard is to drop all of that, let go of everything and try to become your true self again, as you were as a child, unshackled and unhindered by the pressures of life and others' expectations.

    How many of us are in jobs we dislike, having to trawl through routines we hate every day, without enough money to live well or often even be able to afford the basics? This isn't living our true selves, as much his fame wasn't living his true self. Think how free you were when you were a child, free just to be you, the real you. Is this you now? But how do you change when you're embedded and invested in the personality you have become living the life you have created? This is what he's talking about.

    My point was that this is really easy to do (if you put in the psychological work) if you have massive wealth and don't have to worry about paying your mortgage, supporting your children, paying for food and heating etc.

    Without massive wealth, this is near impossible unless you ditch the people you love and who are most important to you and just walk away.

  • @knewspeak said:

    @monz0id said:

    @henryo said:
    I love the sentiment of this, but I can’t help thinking it’s all very easy to say and even do from a position immense wealth and the freedom it brings.

    ^ this.

    It’s true but also wealth and power can be a ‘self’ imposed prison too, albeit a comfortable one.

    Absolutely, this is exactly what he is saying. But when you have that much money, it is easy to make massive changes to the way you live. People who are poor do not have the luxury to make that choice.

  • edited October 2022

    ...

  • If a poor person becomes rich, they can then change their life

  • @henryo said:

    @knewspeak said:

    @monz0id said:

    @henryo said:
    I love the sentiment of this, but I can’t help thinking it’s all very easy to say and even do from a position immense wealth and the freedom it brings.

    ^ this.

    It’s true but also wealth and power can be a ‘self’ imposed prison too, albeit a comfortable one.

    Absolutely, this is exactly what he is saying. But when you have that much money, it is easy to make massive changes to the way you live. People who are poor do not have the luxury to make that choice.

    Yep. Not many ‘open doors’ available if you’re skint, or sick.

  • @u0421793 said:
    If a poor person becomes rich, they can then change their life

    Is that a Liz Truss quote?

  • @purpan2 said:

    @u0421793 said:
    If a poor person becomes rich, they can then change their life

    Is that a Liz Truss quote?

    Worked for her - £140k index linked pension for life, for 37 days in the job.

  • Not many people, rich or poor, can live the life Carrey talks about. I’m not certain even he is doing it, tho he mentions a classic moment of awakening consciousness. Just that he’s hitting all the main points and feeling open is enough…. And is what most of us (including myself) are able to do.

    Working on self awareness is just like making iOS music. You have a bunch of tools and you have to apply them. Getting caught up in the process… meaning disappointment or pride in one’s progress is spiritual materialism. Carrey doesn’t seem to be doing that.

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