"Live and work but do not forget to play, to have fun in life and really enjoy it"
About this Quote
Caddy’s line reads like a gentle reprimand aimed at the modern calendar: yes, keep producing, but don’t let productivity cosplay as a full life. The sentence is structured like a to-do list you can’t optimize. “Live and work” nods to duty and routine, then the pivot - “but do not forget” - frames play as the first thing we misplace when life gets loud. That’s the intent: to re-rank what adults quietly demote, not because they reject joy, but because they treat it as optional.
The subtext is more pointed than the breezy wording suggests. “Play” and “have fun” aren’t luxuries; they’re diagnostic tools. If you can’t access them, something has shifted in your inner economy: you’re spending all your energy on outputs and starving the self that’s supposed to benefit from them. “Really enjoy it” acts like an authenticity check, calling out the kind of leisure that’s just another form of work - curated weekends, performative self-care, rest that still feels like an assignment.
Context matters here. Caddy, known for New Age spirituality and the Findhorn community, built a public identity around inner listening, simplicity, and a life guided by something other than external metrics. Read through that lens, the quote is less “take a vacation” and more “don’t surrender your days to a system that only rewards strain.” It’s a soft sentence with a hard implication: if you forget to play, you may still be living, but you’re not exactly alive.
The subtext is more pointed than the breezy wording suggests. “Play” and “have fun” aren’t luxuries; they’re diagnostic tools. If you can’t access them, something has shifted in your inner economy: you’re spending all your energy on outputs and starving the self that’s supposed to benefit from them. “Really enjoy it” acts like an authenticity check, calling out the kind of leisure that’s just another form of work - curated weekends, performative self-care, rest that still feels like an assignment.
Context matters here. Caddy, known for New Age spirituality and the Findhorn community, built a public identity around inner listening, simplicity, and a life guided by something other than external metrics. Read through that lens, the quote is less “take a vacation” and more “don’t surrender your days to a system that only rewards strain.” It’s a soft sentence with a hard implication: if you forget to play, you may still be living, but you’re not exactly alive.
Quote Details
| Topic | Work-Life Balance |
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