The master and apprentice relationship
The night is young and thoughts have been creeping in slowly into the lazy mind. The mind itself is unaware of the consequences that might change the way the night will pass. Rejection is important and is one of the most important traits of the nature, god or the unfathomable entity that leads the human consciousness to sanity.
Work is important to sustain the ever decaying world and money is the most sharp tool that yields in keeping the decay into control. Have you ever questioned what work demands and what you can actually prove when the work is satisfied to some extent? You did for sometime but you decided to let go.
Imagine an artist looking up to his master for a positive review but lands up being humiliated in-front of his co-workers. The master is not wrong. The creative mind cannot be questioned and thus, the artist finds himself in depression by looking into his mistakes. Still, the work he produced is very close to his soul and the judgement is only possible with like minded men. Slowly, he gives up his style of work and grasps other's strokes as his foundation for inspiration which leads to a critical situation in his mind. This is what I call the state of utter sadness. Sadness is a crucial part of every design process where failure dictates the human mind to strive even more and achieve ultimate perfection.
There lies a catch. Perfection is relative and no creative work is perfect. Thus, the master often finds the apprentice star gazing and looking for answers that don't begin with specific questions. The master orders his apprentice to look for more inspiration from the moving comets and meteorites. The apprentice replies with solid affirmation and he slowly begins to close his dream show into a collective dream.
But that does not stop there. The apprentice secretly waters the will to grow into a master himself and change his master's point of view. He might succeed or fall prey to the abyss of eternal theoretical feud. This is the ultimate philosophy of all intelligent beings out there.
I call it the Master and apprentice relationship.
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