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Americans have a lot of great qualities,
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and one of it is a general work ethic, I think.
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We're a nation of hard workers, and that being said,
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I think sometimes we reach down too far into our youth
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and expect them to produce sooner than they should be able to.
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I think people gain a tremendous amount of wisdom when they travel, when they wander,
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when they allow themselves, as I did, to get lost.
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And maybe you'll find yourself somewhere.
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At least, traveling forces you to be social,
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you have to get directions,
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you have to learn where things are,
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you're attuned to your environment.
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You have to be more careful about the weather
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and where your lodging is going to be,
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where you're going to eat,
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how you're going to get from one place to another.
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When you're there, what is it you want to see?
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How can you find a place for you to actually just rest?
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It's an experience like no other.
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I love to travel,
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and I enjoy not knowing where I am.
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It's an unusual thing: I tell it
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and I purposefully teach that to my daughter,
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who's now 24 years old, to not be afraid
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of not knowing where you are.
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So I'll go for a drive or go for a walk in a different city
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and my wife will say, "Do you know where you're going?"
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"Not really, just kind of exploring different places,"
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and as long as you have a sense of direction,
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you'll find your way, you'll figure it out.
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And I do that in foreign countries as well,
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just kind of wander and meander,
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and trust that you've paid attention
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to at least the basic requirement
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of where you have to get back to
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in order to find your way home.
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I think we look down now to 16-year-olds
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and say, "Where are you gonna go to college?
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What are you going to do for the rest of your life?"
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And it's like, they're not fully baked yet.
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How do they know?
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Give them a break.
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Just say, "Look, I think after high school,
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take a year off, take two years off.
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Join the Peace Corps, travel,
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go figure things out, or just enjoy yourself."
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For the first time in their lives, they're adults
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and they don't have to be somewhere,
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they're not told to be somewhere.
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Get used to that freedom, get used to having the need to self-govern yourself,
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to be able to employ self-discipline or not.
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Or you realize, "Oh my God, I'm really slovenly.
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If I'm not told I need to go to class, I don't go."
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You might discover something about yourself.
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"I need order, I need that, I like that."
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Some people love to be said, "This is where you have to be,
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and this is what you need to do."
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Are you that type of person, or are you
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a type of person that wants more freedom in your life?
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And I think exploration, travel, it provides that.
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In 1976, I had just finished my second year of college
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and realized that after an experience in an elective acting class,
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that I wasn't going to be the policeman I thought I was gonna be.
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That it was better if I didn't continue on
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with two more years of an administration of justice major,
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because I knew I wasn't going to become a policeman.
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So, I thought I better just go figure out
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what it is I want to do.
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And so I hopped on the back of a motorcycle:
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My brother was in the same position, really,
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two young guys who were not quite sure what was in store for them,
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and what avenue they should go down,
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so we both hopped on our motorcycles and we took off.
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We left California;
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I had about 150 bucks in my pocket or something,
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and soon ran low of funds,
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and we had to get jobs along the way.
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What was great about it is that we had total freedom.
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We didn't know exactly where we were going.
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We didn't know how long we were going to stay
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in any given town.
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If it appealed to us, we would stay
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and explore different places and historical sites.
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If it didn't appeal to us, we took off again.
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We slept on golf courses, on cemeteries,
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back of mortuaries, schools,
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anywhere we can throw a sleeping bag.
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An old patch of grass, and that was our home for the night.
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And I was 19, 20 years old.
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It was fun, and you could do that then.
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And that's the time you want to do it.
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That's the age you want to do it.
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And in retrospect, I realized that I took off on this trip,
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which lasted two full years,
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in an effort to allow myself to get lost,
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to be lost, and to figure out while I'm gone,
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what it is I really should be doing with my life.
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So I finally determined it was something
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where I wanted to allow myself to get lost so that I could be found, basically, is what it was.
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And after two years, it was during that trip
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that I had an epiphany that I really wanted to become an actor
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and do everything I could to put myself in a position to make a living,
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and be a professional actor for the rest of my life.