Yeah, V used to say that a lot. I mean, you’ve gotta start somewhere on projects and often, like, where you start is absurd or terrible or a mess, but you kind of have to be willing to do that. You don’t necessarily have the best idea, but if you don’t share your idea that would probably be the worst thing you could do.
Move fast, get feedback, don’t be afraid to fail, because you could turn essentially a micro failure into a macro win. We need to pull out all the stops and we need to make this happen fast. Virgil was somebody that really understood how to run with that.
Virgil was very much somebody who was like, keeps moving forward. He would reflect on what he had done in the past, but was always kind of very focused on what is the next chapter, what is the next story, what is the next movement, that he wanted to kind of share to the world. I think that’s where the real magic starts.
This whole idea of like experimenting, and keep making instead of overthinking it. They referred to it as “V vibes. ” Implying that, you know, you have to exude positivity.
There’s enough negativity in the world that if we love what we’re doing and we’re fortunate to be doing what we’re doing, to just keep that vibe up.