SO NOW THAT YOU'RE HERE For thousands of years people have worked to improve their world, to provide, and then to entertain. The world is developed to serve ourselves, by each and every self, striving to stumble their way towards a better future. Every person seeks the power to serve their own needs, and then some find greater power in helping the rest. That's the aim presented to us, to serve the needs of others, to serve ourselves, so that others can serve us. What are your true needs? Everybody's true needs? How did they lead us here? How did they lead you here? To this file on Gopher, relayed to you through signals bounced across the globe, through machines and systems which are the fulfillment of such dreams and ambitions of generations of engineers, businessmen, and consumers? With millions working across the globe to serve your wants and desires, churning out endless entertainment at great expense just to help you pass the time, here you are reading my words. But anyway, now that you're here... I want to talk about obsession. I love obsession. Obsession is the drive for a need, but run away to become a need in itself. Be it desire, or hate, it's to follow it independently without care for your other needs. Give up serving others, so that they can serve you, so that you can serve them, and never really know who has power over you in the end. Find one need and pursue it as far as it can go, further, break with the mould of reason and of instinct, and just seek. I only do it from time to time. Photography brings it out well when I'm in the mood. Trying to capture that sense, that emotion I feel, on film, and at the same time not knowing whether or not I've succeeded, just seeking it with the assumption that I could always do better. I love to loose myself in that. One of my favourite movies is about obsession. "Eye of the Beholder" (1999) starring Ewan McGregor. I drink that movie up, making sure to leave plenty of time between viewings so as to keep it fresh for as long as I can (luckily my memory is pretty good at forgetting movie plots and endings, one perk amongst the sea of frustration from not being able to remember things from real life). It's just _right_ to me. It was also a commercial flop, and few people online seem to have a good word to say about it. I want to blame this on people seeing it in theatres expecting a standard action/thriller sort of thing, but at least you'd hope for some sort of cult following. Perhaps most people don't feel this way about obsession. Or maybe they're afraid to let that feeling out. I guess it's madness really, because you need to ignore your own restraints. I like to do that, to enter that state of mind, I just need to think in a certain way - I'm not sure if everyone knows how to do that. But it's true that when I do that, I don't want to come back to reason and restraint, I want to stay out there, and with a strong enough obsession then maybe I would, and then maybe I'd forget the way back. I figure that religion is some sort of popular obsession, maybe serving that need among the public while still keeping it in check by directing it in specific ways towards a central organisation. The military too - the soldier so obsessed with duty that he'll take orders without question. I certainly get that latter one. I actually love the opportunity to just take orders and focus on some task without concern for anything else. It's why I worked so hard at school actually, even though I don't think I really got much return for most of that work, certainly a lot of the teachers didn't give it much notice - a few were too lazy to even read much of it beyond observing a quantity of text on a page. That's the problem of course. Eventually you look back, having run out of orders, of obsession, and you've got nowhere. Although maybe I've already got as far as I need to be now anyway. Perhaps obsession is the biggest need still left. - The Free Thinker