Zen Pencils by Gavin Aung Than for July 13, 2015
Transcript:
DANGER DO NOT ENTER TURN BACK BEWARE MONSTER! KEEP OUT BEWARE MONSTER! SWIPE! The most difficult thing is the decision to act. The rest is merely tenacity. SQUISH SQUISH The fears are paper tigers. You can do anything you decide to do. You can act to change and control your life… …and the procedure, the process is its own reward. - Amelia Earhart
ee1958 over 9 years ago
This is adorable. What a great illustrative concept for the quote.
MeGoNow Premium Member over 9 years ago
Five minutes later, the monster ate her. There is a strong inclination among the current generation to believe that if they just want something bad enough, they will surely succeed and become zillionaires. But they do not go all in, because they cannot accept that the monster may well eat them, and for every one who dares and wins, the monster will eat dozens. Unless you care not for whether you get eaten, you cannot succeed.
Fenshaw over 9 years ago
Or, in the words of my great grandfather, “The kids today, I just don’t know, ya’know?”
gammaguy over 9 years ago
This comic seems to promote the idea that if you’re determined, you’re bound to be successful and happy, no matter how naive/ignorant and foolish you are. Sorry; it just ain’t so. Can happen, yes, but very rarely. Much more common are failure, disappointment, even death..Much more realistic is the conclusion of Jerry Bryant’s song “Harbo & Samuelson” about the first two men recorded to have crossed the Atlantic in a rowboat: “Like them be prepared for the task you are facing; they were not only brave; but by God, THEY COULD ROW!”.By the way, does Gavin really think it’s much more fun swimming in a pool of basketballs than playing an actual game with friends?
Comic Minister Premium Member over 9 years ago
This is a good one!
Tom_Tildrum over 9 years ago
That quote is supremely ironic coming from Amelia Earhart, who crashed and died because she wasn’t able to just do anything she wanted to do.
spaced man spliff over 9 years ago
The monster is your own shadowy, darkside. Confront it, and it becomes a valuble ally. Deny it, and you wind up projecting it onto one “them” or another, whether racial, religious, political, whatever.