tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1582438931556658200.post9200791033835769781..comments2023-04-27T07:37:35.853-04:00Comments on . . the.mojo.wire . .: Remembering Steven Bach: The Complex He Gave Me.Randall Nicholshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06252840359471581378noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1582438931556658200.post-69507750957106171622009-04-02T23:57:00.000-04:002009-04-02T23:57:00.000-04:00ooooo..... good one! I hope to be one of the first...ooooo..... good one! I hope to be one of the first people you send your "Maus" to when it is completed. Yes, this will haunt you because I suspect you know this already, but Steven had little use for the excuses and emotional incubation we all take to decide to do something... to wait for the perfect moment, "for it to come to us." Steven didn't wait. He followed the rabbit down the hole and lived a great adventure because of it. His writings came as a result of his own working out those adventures in his own mind and heart. We all would do well to follow his instruction and just write our "maus" or live our adventure or just be present in the moment, taking it all in, reflecting on it in the written word, song, artwork, etc. I think this will be a good complex for you to have. To me it says that he believed you had the talent/gifting/skills to do it. Don't take yourself too seriously... but its Steven's own intellectually elegant and un-athletic way of saying "just do it."Cara Venablenoreply@blogger.com