Jim Haynes newsletters
| Newsletter No. 18 |
| "FULLERING" 23rd June 1976 All you readers of my newsletters know about fullering
I think. As opposed "to work" - which means to spend energy
painfully -, "to fuller" means to spend energy joyfully. I am
fullering when I compose these newsletters and send them out to you. I
have fullered all my life. It describes one's attitude to any endeavour.
Do you enjoy what you do? Is the payment the doing of it or are you doing
it to get money? This is the key difference between working and fullering.
Are you a worker or a fullerer? "Fullerers of the world unite!"
Maybe we can help save this crazy old planet yet - with laughter and joy. |
Like most so-called intellectuals here in France, I,
too, am a Marxist. But, unlike many, I am a Groucho Marxist. OK - "Workers
of the world unite" - but everyone spends energy, so in one sense
everyone is a worker. I feel that our political goal is not to unite workers
but rather to eliminate work as such. Maybe there are some jobs that cannot
be done by fullerers. In that case, let us share work. But there is no
need to create work. I wish to replace the "work ethic" with
the 60's slogan: And another thing. Marxists and so-called capitalists
both agree that "capital" is money. But they both over-look
that pure energy and creative intelligence is also capital. With energy
and intelligence alone, one can build, create, forge, do, act. Most of
the projects I have been connected with in my life have been produced
by fullering, by combining energy and intelligence. My big complaint with
communism is that it seems to kill initiative/ discourage exploration.
I feel the world needs more "thinkers" - the Edisons, Marconis,
Pasteurs, Michelanglos - not less. Surely some kind of non-dogmatic mixed
economy (i.e. the best of both worlds) is what we need. I feel that there
must be very little real difference for the so-called "worker"
in/under a capitalist or a communist economy; both are obsessed with the
"work ethic". But in a world where everyone fullered, everyone
would be happy. |
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OK, my friends, that's it. On the back of this or on
a separate piece of paper, let me have your experiences, ideas, viewpoints. |
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To: Jim Haynes, Atelier A2, 83 rue de la Tombe-Issoire,
75014 Paris |
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Jim Haynes
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June 1976
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Atelier A-2,
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