Cory Richards
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Exactly, exactly.
Exactly, exactly.
Chasing pain away, getting their heart broken. I mean, look at the vast majority of amazing art is all about getting your heart smashed, right?
Chasing pain away, getting their heart broken. I mean, look at the vast majority of amazing art is all about getting your heart smashed, right?
Chasing pain away, getting their heart broken. I mean, look at the vast majority of amazing art is all about getting your heart smashed, right?
I actually think all art is an expression of love. But oftentimes it's coming through the lens of pain. But in my mind, it's love trying to be expressed. And so the reason we create during pain and crisis is because the love feels suppressed. It feels pushed down. And so art is the expression of love coming through you.
I actually think all art is an expression of love. But oftentimes it's coming through the lens of pain. But in my mind, it's love trying to be expressed. And so the reason we create during pain and crisis is because the love feels suppressed. It feels pushed down. And so art is the expression of love coming through you.
I actually think all art is an expression of love. But oftentimes it's coming through the lens of pain. But in my mind, it's love trying to be expressed. And so the reason we create during pain and crisis is because the love feels suppressed. It feels pushed down. And so art is the expression of love coming through you.
who you are yeah and i imagine in some ways it was very healing to do that for you it was healing i mean the photographs putting the photographs in a book putting them into bipolar as a collection was very healing. The memoir, The Color of Everything, the way I often refer to them is they're actually one book. There's the internal exploration and then there's the external manifestation of it.
who you are yeah and i imagine in some ways it was very healing to do that for you it was healing i mean the photographs putting the photographs in a book putting them into bipolar as a collection was very healing. The memoir, The Color of Everything, the way I often refer to them is they're actually one book. There's the internal exploration and then there's the external manifestation of it.
who you are yeah and i imagine in some ways it was very healing to do that for you it was healing i mean the photographs putting the photographs in a book putting them into bipolar as a collection was very healing. The memoir, The Color of Everything, the way I often refer to them is they're actually one book. There's the internal exploration and then there's the external manifestation of it.
And so they're really companion books where one, you get to see how my mind was interpreting the world around me, but the other one, you get to see what was really happening underneath it and what was at many times driving it.
And so they're really companion books where one, you get to see how my mind was interpreting the world around me, but the other one, you get to see what was really happening underneath it and what was at many times driving it.
And so they're really companion books where one, you get to see how my mind was interpreting the world around me, but the other one, you get to see what was really happening underneath it and what was at many times driving it.
Well, my friend, Dr. Luanne Freer, she was the one that actually sort of was like, I went to Everest in 2012 and she was like, and got evacuated. And she's like, I think you had a panic attack. And this was after the avalanche. My point in bringing that up is she never climbed Everest. She just created the Everest ER.
Well, my friend, Dr. Luanne Freer, she was the one that actually sort of was like, I went to Everest in 2012 and she was like, and got evacuated. And she's like, I think you had a panic attack. And this was after the avalanche. My point in bringing that up is she never climbed Everest. She just created the Everest ER.
Well, my friend, Dr. Luanne Freer, she was the one that actually sort of was like, I went to Everest in 2012 and she was like, and got evacuated. And she's like, I think you had a panic attack. And this was after the avalanche. My point in bringing that up is she never climbed Everest. She just created the Everest ER.
And that was her life for years and years and years, was creating a medical facility to care for climbers and Sherpa, high altitude workers.
And that was her life for years and years and years, was creating a medical facility to care for climbers and Sherpa, high altitude workers.
And that was her life for years and years and years, was creating a medical facility to care for climbers and Sherpa, high altitude workers.