We live to commune. We live to create. Our enduring biological and spiritual drive is to create, to live in the act of becoming. It is not a choice. It is our experience of our existence.
Paul Michael Glaser
Stanford School of Medicine Commencement 2004, 2004
A história por trás desta citação
Glaser drew a surprising connection between acting and medicine. As a director, he discovered that the most powerful performances came when actors lost control — when they were scared, naked in the moment, forced to cope with what is rather than what they planned. And when they survived it, the experience was a high, a connection with something larger than themselves. This 'connection,' he argued, was what people called 'being creative' — and it applied far beyond art. Whether healing a patient, discovering a cure, inventing software, or affecting dialogue between mortal enemies, the drive to create and connect was the fundamental human experience.