. . . different circumstances, like, say, playing with people whose primary goal is to support one another. I guess no matter how stupid the move seems, I feel like my job is to support it. (Not that I always do this, but it IS my job.) I can't speak for anyone else, but I'm incapable of judging just a little bit and then playing freely; it's all or nothing with me. So I'm working toward nothing.DollarBill wrote:If you made a subconscious, feely type move that got killed by lack of support from your team, it might be okay to think, "That might have worked under different circumstances."
How We Decide by Jonah Lehrer
Everything else, basically.
Moderators: arclight, happywaffle
"I'm not a real aspirational cat."
-- TJ Jagodowski
-- TJ Jagodowski
I smell the progress of a great improviser.DollarBill wrote:I don't want want to poop all over your impulse party, but I think it's important to distinguish that not every decision is better made by the "subconsious". In fact, a lot of decissions, especially in improv, definitely warrent a bit of thought. Also, rationalizing can be helpful. If you made a subconscious, feely type move that got killed by lack of support from your team, it might be okay to think, "That might have worked under different circumstances."
I don't know.... devil's advocate. He's not that bad by the way. All bark and no bite.
"Every cat dies 9 times, but every cat does not truly live 9 lives."
-Bravecat

-Bravecat
