I play video games, dude!

Am I a rock star? Yeah, I guess.

Sex is funny and love is serious.

I've always identified with the misfits

I've always identified with the misfits.

It's important to face down your demons.

You just gotta go after things you like.

You make kingdoms and castles on your own.

I find pleasure in things that are simple.

I've spent several years now with my head down.

I think if it's not monumental, there's no point.

I have my share of insecurities, hopes and fears.

I carry groceries home on the tank of my motorcycle.

I like surfing; I bring a surfboard with me on tour.

Life is cruel and unfair, my friends, and that is fact.

I like people who have a pulse and aren't afraid to show it.

So I like that sound, but I am not interested in being retro.

I was not someone who participated in other people's castles.

My music is my way to rearrange the world according to my own hopes.

Books stay with me and have shaped me and made huge impacts on my life.

It was a hard time for me to have a pure moment, to be present, to be here.

I have this really beautiful Martin guitar, and it just kind of writes songs for me.

There's usually a rhythm and a melody in my head, and that creates an emotional state

There's usually a rhythm and a melody in my head, and that creates an emotional state.

But when our first album came out, I didn't think it was going to sell a lot of records.

Luxury and Ostentation usually make me feel antsy, like I'm going to get a case of gout.

I try to be the fixer of situations and I gravitate to people who are institutional misfits.

When you're just shagging girls, you can talk about it, but once it gets real, then you don't.

A lot of people say I wouldn't have a down day, but you look at the music and there's real melancholy.

That's what drew me to rock music in the first place - that sense of remaking the world on your own terms.

But I'm not worried about seeking out the approval of others - that high school thing of joining the club.

I don't really believe in palm readers and crystal balls and tarot cards, but I respond to the need for them.

What we value about music and literature are the moments that they create in our minds when we encounter them.

I have my share of insecurities, hopes and fears. My music is my way to rearrange the world according to my own hopes.

There are songs I really enjoy playing. I like playing "Say It" live because it's a long jam, kind of like shoegaze, so I do enjoy that.

My music is so often like a lullaby I write to myself to make sense of things I can't tie together, or things I've lost, or things I'll never have.

I don't think DIY is something that necessarily comes to mind when people hear Third Eye Blind, but that is completely how we've been from the beginning.

You probably became a musicians because you're into it so stay that way. Don't believe that someone else has the golden ticket for you because they don't.

Sometimes something will come along, and it feels easy and sometimes you'll get 85 percent there on a song and the last 15 percent will elude you for three years.

Music is the only thing in this world, with the exception of sneezing and looking at the sunset, that takes you to a place that's above the mundane. Everything else is just bullshit.

I believe that all people are deserving of equal dignity and also equal protection. I also believe in science. And those are three things the Republican party platform doesn't believe in.

I like that gathering moment where the music is about to begin, that moment right there. It's like jumping out of an airplane. It's that moment when the lights go out and then you're in it.

When people come together around music, there's something ancient going on. It has to come from a genuine place and that's part of the challenge. You have to cultivate that authenticity everyday.

I respect Chris Carrabba as a songwriter and I also respect his past. He's got this fierce, straight edge, kind of hardcore core. There's so many songs that people are connected to and they all came together in a kind of DIY way, which I really do respect.

I see rock music as the best example of modernday storytelling that exists in our society. Songs are narratives that help the listeners cope with the reality of life that can't be easily spoken about in everyday conversation. It is a hugely powerful process of helping people find themselves through music.

I would say, if you're a musician then you probably have some capacity and some intuition. You've got to trust that intuition and be true to what compels you. There will be a lot of things along the way that will try to remove you from that, and if you do, then I think you are diminished. If you stay with it, then you have something that's real.

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