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The Monday Morning Memo

According to Bob Dilenschneider, most people are only “life interns” until they are 25 years old. So roving reporter Rotbart enlisted his daughter, Avital, (who turns 25 this week,) to help interview Dilenschneider! (Sounds fun already, right?)  As Avital points out, there is a great deal to be learned from history, no matter your age. Dilenschneider agrees, and tells the story of several well-known personalities from Mozart to Einstein to Steve Jobs, who, when they were 25 years old, began their treks to immortal fame. And we think that list might grow to include Ms. Avital Rotbart.

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Random Quote:

“I am often asked if any of my books are autobiographical. To most of those enquirers I answer that they are not autobiographical at all, because they do not report the facts of any part of my life. That is not a wholly honest answer, because the true answer is not something which children or literal-minded people can understand. There are people to whom the complex truth is less comprehensible than the simple lie. To ask an author who hopes to be a serious writer if his work is autobiographical is like asking a spider where he buys his silk. The spider gets his thread right out of his own guts, and that is where the writer gets his writing, and in that profound sense everything he writes is autobiographical. He could not write it if he had not seen it and felt it deeply.”

- Robertson Davies, The Merry Heart, p. 167

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