An Open Letter to eKaterina

I was disappointed you so easily let go of your brilliance. It is important for you as an artist to not compromise, to not give in to lesser ideas, and for you to fight for your aesthetic.


The price of that fight may be unhappy people but you must find a way
to convince them that “even though you don’t see it, trust me that I
see it” and inspire them follow you.
I know most of your group was on your side.

If there were some who
refused to go along with your genius because they have not been as well
trained as you or because they are not as smart as you… then you need
to find a way to negate their negative influence.

Place them in smaller
roles. Place them on edges. Have them tread water while the rest of you
create and sustain and serve the brilliance of your idea.

It was said of the great American Playwright Eugene O’Neill that he had
the power to see light during the day that others could only see at
night. That means that the stars in the sky were always visible to
O’Neill and he had the capacity for sharing that light at any time. He
did not have to wait for darkness to fall to provide the beauty of
illumination.

You have the potential to one day be in O’Neill’s league and the
challenge of the rest of your life is to work with others who may be
blind to your brilliance and then provide them a means of understanding
your path so they can follow into your everlasting light.

Good luck!

About David W. Boles

Publishes 14 blogs through BolesBlogs.com. Teaches via BolesUniversity.com. Publishes through BolesBooks.com. Lives at Boles.com.
This entry was posted in Culture and tagged , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

4 Responses to An Open Letter to eKaterina

  1. Death of the Old God

    The great American Playwright Eugene O’Neill said, in the early 1900′s: “The greatest challenge to mankind over the next century will be the failure of science and technology to replace the death of the old God.”…

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