- Sat Dec 09, 2006 1:46 pm
#11634
People like to try new things and excel in that thing once they get used to it. They see a new side of themselves and of what is possible when they do something new. They also sometimes do better at it than a person who may have been doing it for a long time, because they have a fresh out look on the subject, and will include their own new original ideas in that field.
I was thinking, what would it be like if, as a law or something, people were told to try doing the opposite job of what they usually do. Of course, there is no exact meaning of an 'opposite job' but say, for example, if someone like an artist was to switch to something more academic...like script-writing (although this is not an incredibly academic example...)
What do you think?...
I was thinking, what would it be like if, as a law or something, people were told to try doing the opposite job of what they usually do. Of course, there is no exact meaning of an 'opposite job' but say, for example, if someone like an artist was to switch to something more academic...like script-writing (although this is not an incredibly academic example...)
What do you think?...