It's a matter of life and death for this country. The Kenyan forests are facing extinction and it is a man-made problem.
For a culture that has such a problem with death we seem to deal with it in a quite bizarre way. We see people shot killed and blown up and we find it funny and sexy and all those things. But the reality of it is that every day people die and people are really sad and they grieve and they go through a really difficult process with it.
If you make every game a life and death proposition you're going to have problems. For one thing you'll be dead a lot.
I don't think kids have a problem with death. It's us older ones who are nearer to it that start being frightened.
Death is the solution to all problems. No man - no problem.
Death solves all problems - no man no problem.
I was really bright as a kid and tested well and it was clear that I was going to get scholarships to any schools I wanted. My dad always said I could be an engineer at that time it was the elite of society: steady job working in science which was then the answer to every problem we had. It was kind of a mandate. Kind of a dream he had for me.
I would ask my dad what he did and he'd say 'I listen to people's problems.' In some way what he did for a living is in my genes.
I deal with my sons like young men. If they have a problem with something they come to me. I am the type of dad that will drop everything I am doing for them and always tell them to talk to me about it.
My dad was an engineer and he became the CEO of Chevron. His was an engineer's mind-set: Everything's kind of a problem how do you approach the problem?