Author: ERIC KIM

  • IT IS GOOD TO BE PARTICULAR.

    IT IS GOOD TO BE PARTICULAR.

    We are often told and taught that it is bad to be particular and choosy or picky. However, perhaps this is the best thing.

  • LESS FRICTION.

    LESS FRICTION.

    The upside of payment methods like PayPal, Apple Pay, Venmo, etc. is that it reduces friction for payment. For example, how seamless it is to order stuff on Amazon, as Amazon is now a very safe and trusted platform, which saves and stores all of your shipping and payment information.

    A further thought when it comes to reducing friction in your life:

    1. Less friction in your photography: Ricoh GR 3 or Ricoh GR 3X in your front right pocket. Always ready to make photos. No friction to take your camera out, you don’t think about it, and that your camera becomes an embedded an integrated part of your mind, body and soul.
    2. Less friction for fitness: always wear the same outfit to the gym, and figure it once you get to the gym. Make it easy and seamless as possible to either walk or drive to the gym, and figure out your workout once you get there.
    3. Seamless payment structure: figure out the simplest, most seamless way for customers to purchase things from your website. Accept Apple Pay, PayPal, or other forms of payment which make it very easy for people to pay.
  • DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT.

    DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT.

    If there is something that annoys you a lot, enough, just do something about it. Either, figure out whether money could solve the issue, or whether action can.

  • “Free” Things Often Require Hidden Maintenance

    “Free” Things Often Require Hidden Maintenance

    Or in other words be very wary of and don’t accept free things. Let alone “free” services!

    Better upfront cost than hidden backdoor cost.

    For example house sitting for a friend — keeping it clean, hidden things that break, garden infestations that have to be dealt with, etc. And cleaning it again once you leave.

    Even getting a free car — having to keep it clean, maintain it, change the oil, shovel out the snow and get rid of ice in winter, etc.

  • Marketing Has Truth

    Marketing Has Truth

    Reveals the true preferences of people.

  • Cars Are Cowardly

    Cars Are Cowardly

    Turbo legs and thighs over cars!

  • Black and White is Non-Obvious

    Black and White is Non-Obvious

    Color is too obvious, easy to decipher for the viewer:

    Sushi salmon sashimi low key
  • I don’t like thinking about other people

    I don’t like thinking about other people

    When I’m not physically around them.

  • Nobody cares for your clothes or outfit

    Nobody cares for your clothes or outfit

    Just make sure you’re wearing something that you yourself feel good in.

    Or another words, care less about your clothes.

  • If it works for you, don’t change it

    If it works for you, don’t change it

    Stick to the same approach and technique if it works fine for you!

    For example conventional deadlift held me back, so I switched to sumo and mixed grip with chalk and it works well! Got me at least to 475 pounds. I should stick with it, instead of switching the bar (trap bar).

    Only change it if there’s a super compelling reason to do so.

  • How to Become the Most Sublime Photo Machine

    How to Become the Most Sublime Photo Machine

    Assuming our purpose or telos to life is photography, then begs the question —

    How can we become the most sublime photo machine of all time?

    Some thoughts:

    The most powerful, muscular body for photography

    The naïve understanding we have for photography and art is that as long as one has a “spirited soul“, one can become a great photographer. I disagree. One cannot become a truly great artist or photographer without having great muscles, or without a great body.

    For example, even Pablo Picasso, in his later years, you could see how great shape he was in, topless at the beach with his young wife.

    Even the bodybuilder Kai, apparently he started a comic book series— I would only trust a comic book series with a highly muscular and powerful superhero, who has a physically formidable author.

    Even the John Wick series: the reason why I trust it is that the Director Chad S — he himself is in great shape.

    Study the artist, not the art

    We also have a naïve understanding that somehow, we can separate the artist from his/her artwork. This is not possible. It is like trying to study the appearance of a child without first looking at the mother or father.

    I say if you want to improve the condition of your photos, first improve your own personal physiology.

    Don’t buy that new camera or lens

    Aluminum foil abstract

    Instead, just buy a very heavy kettlebell. 70 pounds, 105 pounds, 200 pounds, etc.

    Or just get a good gym membership somewhere close by and convenient.

    Focus on strengthening your legs

    Seneca low key

    I have a simple thought: if you deadlift over 500 pounds, or squat over 400 pounds, how can this not benefit your photography? As photographers, our Archimedes lever is our legs and our feet.

    Consider, the stronger your legs are, the further you could walk, with less fatigue. Also, the greater ability you’ll have to squat down low to the ground to get better angles for your photos, or even sprint quickly to catch the photo opportunity.

    Practice

    Seneca hand grip

    Maybe it is a good idea to think about our photography like breathing. Or drinking coffee. Does a day go by in which you don’t breathe, or drink coffee? I think not.

    Every time you click the shutter, you are practicing making a photo.

    Pratikos in Ancient Greek — to do, to cross, to go over.

    What is the end goal of our photography? To simply keep doing it. Mastery is a fluid and flux process, in which the end of your progress is your personal death.

    One of the things I find very sad about athletes is when they have to retire. Either by choice, or without. For example, I don’t think people actually know that Michael Jordan is still alive. How sad it must be to just watch rising stars on the sidelines.

    Note any actor, athlete, artist or individual as happy, as long as he or she is still practicing.

    So the question about your photography:

    Are you in practice, or out of practice?

    The goal is to stay in practice, until you die.

    Visual stimuli

    Selfie Eric Kim Seneca

    At the end of the day, assuming that all you owned was a pair of shorts, and your camera, what is the use of all of your time and money? Simply to expose yourself to certain environments which are maximal conducive to finding inspiration and motivation to make new photos.

    For example, if you desire to use your money to make new photos, use that money towards travel. It doesn’t need to be far, or expensive. You could spend your money on gas, charging your electric vehicle, or going on a flight. For accommodations, you could just do a day trip, or spend money at a cheap hotel or Airbnb.

    This is also the funny thing: I’ve actually discovered that the most picturesque places are the worst place to go to make photos. For example, when I was in college it was my dream to backpack through Europe, and shoot street photography in Paris. However ironically enough, I found Paris as the least inspiring place to shoot street photography. Much more interesting to shoot street photography in Marseille than in Paris. Lesson —

    The grittier the place is, and the less “fancy”, the better it is for photography.

    Or another words, better to shoot street photography in Hanoi than in Singapore.

    Also the upside—

    If you want to maximize your photography potential, go to cheaper places.

    Berlin, Prague, Saigon.

    Insanely simple

    Abstract black and white

    RICOH GR IIIX, High contrast black-and-white, extra small JPEG. Use Apple photos to review and flag your photos, and upload them to your own personal website blog.

    Our concern isn’t too much the photo itself, but the process of being infinitely inspired to make more new photos.

    Or in other words, making perfect photos or even “good” photos isn’t the goal. Rather, it is to just always be shooting, and reviewing your photos, and delight in this “eternal return” in your photography.

    ERIC

    VENTURE ON!

    walking woman umbrella crimson red

    Discover your soul in photography at ERIC KIM EXPERIENCE

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    Food for thought

    1. Twilight of the Idols by Nietzsche
    2. The Odes of Anacreon
    3. Lightning Network

    MOAR

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    “ARS LONGA, VITA BREVIS” (Art [will last a] long time, life is short) – Seneca

  • Lightning Network

    Lightning Network

    Perhaps BITCOIN & the Lightning Network may be the future for crypto payments (BitPay).

  • Fungible Photos

    Fungible Photos

    Maybe I prefer the notion of fungible photos over non-fungible photos (NFT).

  • THE OVERPHOTOGRAPHER

    THE OVERPHOTOGRAPHER

    The most complete and fully-formed photographer possible!

  • TURBO NAPS.

    TURBO NAPS.

    Good to have lots of turbo naps throughout the day!

  • THE CULT OF BLACK

    THE CULT OF BLACK

    We believe black to be best.

  • Stronger Stimuli to Get Our Muscles in Motion

    Stronger Stimuli to Get Our Muscles in Motion

    The great man as requiring stronger stimuli to get his muscles in motion?

  • Are We Eating Incorrectly?

    Are We Eating Incorrectly?

    A thought that came to my mind: perhaps we are eating incorrectly. That means, not eating enough meat, and eating too much filler.

    How to eat

    Fasting all day, then when it comes dinner time, to strive to eat at least 3 pounds of meat. Eating your meat with kimchi, or some sort of fermented food or sauerkraut. Helps with digestion in order to eat more meat.

    Also, eating while standing. Ideally outdoors, al fresco dining. No distractions while eating, in order to eat more.

  • Why Conspiracies Don’t Exist

    Why Conspiracies Don’t Exist

    The government isn’t smart or coordinated enough to actually conduct conspiracies. Or any other organizations.

    This is actually the hilarious thing: a lot of people who believe in conspiracy theories are actually highly intelligent people — are they actually smart enough to truly believe that governments, or other organizations are actually smart enough or coordinated enough to conduct these conspiracies? Consider how inefficient the DMV is, or, if you have been part of any planning committee, how nothing gets done.

    And then, think several orders beyond. If there were any true conspiracies, could anyone actually keep these conspiracies under wraps? No. Nobody could keep a secret, let alone an inept government.

  • New Modes of Creative Expression

    New Modes of Creative Expression

    NOMAD SCULPT ON IPAD—

    https://videopress.com/v/3ihkxRGr?resizeToParent=true&cover=true&preloadContent=metadata&useAverageColor=true
  • What Do We *Really* Want?

    What Do We *Really* Want?

    A thought this morning: what we desire is greater strength, in order to attempt greater feats of strength. To test ourselves, and our abilities, and our limits.

  • MY LUST AND DESIRE TO CONQUER

    MY LUST AND DESIRE TO CONQUER

    The desire for more strength, more powerful at any cost, for greater challenges — our true driving force.

  • Survive the winter

    The winter toughens you.

  • The problem with toys

    The problem with toys

    They only serve a single purpose.

    Why I prefer deeply illustrated books — a new experience every single time.

  • Self-Tolerance

    Self-Tolerance

    We always tout notions of acceptance intolerance to others, but why never towards ourselves?

  • It is fine to put your own life at risk, but it becomes a problem when you put the lives of others at risk

    It is fine to put your own life at risk, but it becomes a problem when you put the lives of others at risk

    This is the big problem about anti-maskers; let us say that you have Covid, the purpose of a mask is to prevent you from infecting others.

    Therefore, it isn’t an issue about your own personal freedom; it is your ethical duty not to infect or harm others.

  • Having kids is a privilege

    Having kids is a privilege

    Not everyone *should* have kids, nor should they feel pressured to have kids. However, in today’s world, having kids is the ultimate luxury and sign of wealth.

  • Repetition is Good

    Repetition is Good

    Nowadays there is so much a focus on thinking that repetition is bad. However, if you want to become stronger, typically speaking, the more repetitions you do have a certain lift, the stronger you will become overtime.

  • Prove your identity

    Prove your identity

    I like the idea of like having a Social Security number, to prove your identity, that is nation agnostic.

  • Blockchain Money

    Being able to prove your funds, on the blockchain.

    Also being able to prove the worth of something, using the Blockchain.

  • Prove Your Rank

    One of the greatest opportunities for the future of crypto identity: being able to prove your rank, honestly on the blockchain.

  • Become a Jedi

    The point isn’t to become a rebel, nor become an imperial. Rather, to be aloof from it all, and just focus on your Jedi training, and becoming a Jedi Knight.

  • How to Become More Minimalist

    How to Become More Minimalist

    PODCAST

    For us, minimalism is our ethos, and our approach.

    Why minimalism?

    For me, minimalism is all about pruning away the inessential, in order to allow you to maximize the essential.

    For example, a simple act is wearing the same all black everything outfit every single day, thus, one less thing for you to worry about or think about first thing in the morning, and allows you to jump directly into what you care most about. This was Steve Jobs‘s approach, apparently he had 100 of those iconic Issey Miyake long black turtlenecks in his closet. The same goes with Mark Zuckerberg, and his simple great T-shirt approach.

    But don’t we care for individuality?

    Always the danger and the fear is becoming a lemming. Nobody wants to become a herd animal, and just follow the herd.

    I had a funny realization when I was at a hipster coffee shop in Berlin: everybody in the coffee shop was wearing all black everything. At that moment, I knew I had to switch up my wardrobe.

    However, upon deeper reflection: for me, perhaps the purpose of minimalism isn’t to be different, but just to strive towards the most simple and Zen approach. If that means just wearing whatever is in your closet on the day of, without worrying or thinking too much about it, perhaps this is a good thing.

    Empty your mind

    For minimalism, 99.9% of the obsession is about stuff, and getting rid of stuff. However, perhaps a better approach is to think about your mind. Your clothes and stuff is important, but should maybe only comprise up of 10% of your life. 90% of your life should just be towards your mind, and your body.

    I discovered that the most productive mind is an empty mind. The irony: once you empty up your mind, then you could fill it up with interesting thoughts, which come from within.

    Let us say that you like to write, or do some sort of creative work. A very simple one is to not check your email first thing in the morning. Ideally uninstall email or work email from your phone. And just do it on your laptop once you get into work.

    Reading paperback books at night

    Another thing I’ve also discovered is this: reading too much is actually not good for you. Reading in small doses is helpful, helps stimulate or relax your mind, but, I don’t think the purpose of life is to just read ad infinitum. Reading is more of a luxury than the end goal.

    Even when I think about it, thinking about the countless number of hundreds of books I’ve read: there might only be about three or five books which have really helped me in my life. Like Seneca said:

    Better to just have a handful of books in your bookshelf, and to always reread the same books over and over again, rather than having a huge library and reading every book only once.

    For myself personally, the only books which have really helped me include the meditations by Marcus Aurelius, the letters of Seneca, and books by Nietzsche. For entrepreneurship, Zero to One by Peter Thiel, Antifragile by Nassim Taleb, and the Walter Isaacson biography of Steve Jobs. For poetry, Horace. For bravery and courage, the Iliad by Homer.

    I’m currently housesitting for a friend, and when I have a little bit of excess energy in the evening, I just want to relax my mind, I’ve actually discovered that reading paperback books at night, is far superior than reading books on Kindle or iPad. Why? If the purpose is for you to relax your mind in the evening, a paperback book doesn’t keep your mind stimulated. For example, when I read a book in the evening on my iPad, I’m always looking up new words, and searching random things. A book helps you just focus. I found a copy of “Twilight of the idols” by Nietzsche on my friends bookshelf, and have been reading at the night, with great delight.

    Uninstall it all

    A technology minimalist thing I have done is simple: it was my long-standing practice to every day uninstall at least one app from my phone, iPad, or laptop. This helped me prune down to my essential applications, which all include production. For example, IA Writer for writing, Safari for blogging, procreate for sketching, Zen brush 2 for calligraphy, and Apple photos for photography.

    Even something I’ve done is whenever I get a new device, let’s say a new iPhone, iPad, or laptop, I always do a fresh install. I don’t import old stuff. This helps me think carte blanche (blank slate). And like any good IT person, I always start off by uninstalling all of the bloatware, and then only reinstalling the truly essential apps.

    No subscription services

    Something simple I’ve discovered: rather than having unlimited media, it is better to just pay for your media as you go. For example, I have purchased all of the John Wick films on my Apple TV account, each film individually for 10 or 15 bucks, instead of paying some stupid $10-$15 a month for HBO max, Netflix, etc. The reason is this: if there is something you really really want to watch, just pay for it. If you always have the streaming services available for you to watch, it is rather a boredom seeking device, rather than an information seeking one.

    For example, let us say that I am walking around, and suddenly the thought of Spartans comes to me. Then it is wise for me to purchase the movie 300 by Zack Snyder, and watch it, instead of randomly jumping on a streaming service.

    Subtraction is addition

    One of the critical flaws of minimalism and zen is that the thought is the apex state is nothing, and nothingness. However, this is not a good idea. For example, the Spartans embraced frugality in their lifestyle, dress, and speech, not to be virtuous for the sake of being virtuous, but rather, a hugely practical one. They wanted to prune away the inessential to just focus on training, combat, and their personal freedom.

    For the last decade, I made it fun game to see how much stuff I could get rid of, and how men was that could become. There was a certain point where I did reach apex minimalism; no laptop, only iPad, only one outfit while living in Vietnam. This was great because it allowed me maximum focus, and productivity, and maximal artistic and creative thriving. But the problem is once I reached that state, I wanted to see if I could become even more minimalist, which actually ended up hurting me more than helping me. Therefore a simple thought is this:

    Once you think you have reached about 80 to 90% minimalism, don’t strive towards further further minimalism.

    For example, let us say that you are trying to lose weight. To chop off an arm in order to lose weight on the scale seems ridiculous. But sometimes this is what people do. It is like how Ricoh got rid of the flash, pruning away an arm just to lower their footprint and size.

    Once you have reached an optimal level of minimalism, don’t think about minimalism for the sake of minimalism. Rather, I think the end is for you to keep streamlining or optimizing your life, for your own greatest personal benefit.

    For example, let us talk about owning a car, or having a car. Depending on your situation, having a car may help you or hurt you. The point isn’t to not have a car for the sake of not having a car, but rather, what is best for you and your lifestyle. For example, in some scenarios, owning a car does simplify your life. And not not owning a car makes your life more complicated.

    Strive to make your life more simple, less complicated.

    Minimalism in photography

    Out of all of the practical domains out there, perhaps minimalism in our photography is what matters the most, instead of minimalism in our lifestyle. Why? Lifestyle is only a means to the end, not the ending itself. I see photography as an end. For example, having a minimalist lifestyle in order to make more photos.

    Some very practical thoughts about minimalism and photography is this: the best photos are the most minimal.

    For example, the reason why I prefer black-and-white is that it is the most minimalist aesthetic for photography. Certainly you can make minimalist color photos as well, but for myself personally, monochrome is still simpler.

    I like the idea that no matter what my scenario or living situation, I can always discover things to photograph. And this is the great thing with black and white:

    Black and white broadens my vision, whereas color restricts my creative vision.

    When you’re shooting color photography, you’re always looking for colorful things to photograph. When it comes to black-and-white, I am more interested and focused on shapes, things, and concepts. Black-and-white offers you more creative optionally, whereas color photography limits your creative optionality.

    Reduce your compass

    Another thought I have is that it is better to keep photographing the small same area over and over again, and milk every single nook and cranny, rather than to just keep exploring huge spaces of land, and being less efficient with photographing the space.

    For example, one of my favorite places to photograph is the fashion District in downtown Los Angeles. I would rather just keep visiting the same neighborhood over and over again, and looping around the block 1 million times, and milking the maximum out of that small square block, instead of trying to travel the whole world.

    Currently, I’m housesitting for a friend in the iconic North Park neighborhood in San Diego. I really love the neighborhood. I’ve looped around the small neighborhood a 100 times, and I always discover more interesting nuances to photograph.

    Or let us say that you live in New York. Rather than trying to photograph all of New York, maybe it is best for you to just choose a neighborhood you really like, and stick to it, rather than always looking for something new.

    Minimalism compositions

    When it comes to composing your photos, I prefer the most minimal ones. Why? I like the idea that you can minimize your composition, but maximize the emotional impact you get from the photo.

    For example, the critical error that lots of beginner photographers make as they try to photograph everything. However, if you try to photograph everything, there is not one single thing your eye can anchor onto. Better to have a single thing for your eye to anchor onto, and for your eye to maximize and discover the interesting nuances of it, rather than a photo of too much information.

    A simple way to do this is shooting macro mode. For example, I really love the Ricoh GR 3 and the Ricoh GR 3X, because the macro mode is so great. You can focus so close onto anything, and in focusing very very close, you discover beautiful nuances in it. This is why now, I prefer Ricoh at least 1 trillion times more than any Leica camera, simply because of the close macro ability.

    No layers

    Currently a new aesthetic which is dominating photography and street photography is this notion of adding infinite layers for the sake of layers. However upon much reflection, I’ve discovered that this new aesthetic is more about flexing how clever you are, rather than being something truly substantive. Example, a lot of people want to shoot epic layers in street photography as a form of elitism, rather than thinking:

    Do these layers actually add anything substantive to my photo?

    The thought first came to me when it came to clothes: the best clothes are the most minimal clothes with the fewest amount of layers. Ideally, topless, in short shorts, like the Spartan 300s. They had a bare chest, bare legs, and all they had is their iconic Crimson red cape, helmet, shield and spear.

    Therefore, I would actually encourage you to flatten your compositions, and get rid of layers. For example, I’ve actually discovered the new 40mm focal length on the Ricoh GR 3X is great for minimalism. It adds more compression to your photo, similar to a 50mm lens, like which Henri Cartier Bresson used, yet is still wide enough for your natural eye.

    Therefore as a simple thought: when in doubt, get rid of more layers.

    Minimal workflow

    Also a simple thought when it comes to workflow is this: rather than thinking about how to make your workflow “better”, strive to make it flow better.

    For example, the notion of optimization is a mostly nerdy one, in which nerds try to make things more technical, more detailed. For example, adding more meta-data, captions, tags, notes. But, a better workflow idea is this: what is the most minimal amount of flagging you can do, in order to maximize utilize 90% of the desired output?

    For example, I’ve discovered Apple photos as a superior option to Adobe Lightroom. Why? Deeper integration with the whole Apple ecosystem, and also, the only thing you really need to do with your photos is to flag the ones you like. Then filter your favorite photos, and just export them.

    Or with the writing, IA WRITER with markdown as 1 trillion times superior to Microsoft Word, or even Google Docs. Why? All you need when it comes to writing is the raw text, and the syntax for header, bold, links, and italics. Fewer options for formatting means more focus and output for your writing.

    Pursue a few things in life, but do them very very well.

    Like a child, I think it is good for you to dabble and experiment in everything which personally interests you. But once you find the few things which you really really love, strive to maximize them.

    ERIC


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    Think less, shoot more:

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    Minimal Tools

    1. Outlier.nyc black merino wool tshirt, athletic shorts.
    2. iPad Pro — why I love iPad Pro
    3. RICOH GR IIIX

    Minimal thoughts

    1. Before buying something, think about it for a long time. Maybe 3-4 months.
    2. When you buy something new, get rid of two old things.
    3. The point isn’t to make your life “better”, but less complicated and more streamlined.

    Minimal books

    1. Iliad by Homer
    2. Basho zen haiku poems
    3. Beyond Good and Evil by Nietzsche
    4. Antifragile by Nassim Taleb

    ‌Id this helped you streamline any of your thoughts, feel free to forward to a friend!


    ERIC KIM BLOG


  • COMPELLING OR NOT?

    COMPELLING OR NOT?

    Only do things which you feel compelled to do.

  • DEFY WHAT IS ”RATIONAL”

    DEFY WHAT IS ”RATIONAL”

    Irrational is best. A life pursuing to only do that which is rational is a boring and base life.

  • ALL BLACK PLAID.

    ALL BLACK PLAID.

    The new apex vehicle.

  • THE WEB IS THE FUTURE

    THE WEB IS THE FUTURE

    Not ”apps”.

    The freedom to publish what you desire, in a decentralized, tamper-proof and censorship-free way.

  • Why Millenials Have No Money

    Too much focus on ‘living an interesting life’ rather than ‘building interesting things’.

  • WEB 5

    WEB 5

    WEB5 seems much more fun, interesting and sexy then “web 3”.

  • Interesting Or Uninteresting to You?

    Interesting Or Uninteresting to You?

    Never pursue anything which is uninteresting to you.

  • Have the courage to be vain

    Have the courage to be vain

    Being ”Selfless“ is also a form of vanity.

  • Just blend it all together

    No more distinctions and boundaries