6 years ago
Monday, February 23, 2009
Music
I learned oud, or lute, for 3 years. Even though I gave up in exasperation and despair of ever being this good, I find that I miss it now. I wish I could create beauty, joy, or goodness by virtue of a talent, or knowledge, or skill. Would that I could flood the world with the reservoir that is my soul. But I have been given no tap, and that which I strive to fashion for the moment in every moment is ever rusted, blocked, a crude and pathetic attempt at elevation above the mundane, at becoming more than a consumer of the efforts of other beings and things.
Later
Tonight I have no urge to do anything. I just want to put everything off until later. If I could, I would put all of life on pause. Since I am deprived of that particular talent, I have to settle for being 'unhealthily' good at procrastination. I don't know why my severe lack of motivation is worse these days, but I do know the weather is not helping. I went down to the Cape for a night, and it was so beautiful I did not know what to do with myself coming back. There were so many stars I could not be sure of Orion's lines. And, there was family. The closest to family that I have away from my family. They are in mourning, as am I. He was a fine man, and always kind and generous to me. I will miss him.
It is important to know want, to become a truly mature and responsible human. And not just know the fleeting desire and the shallow, in the ignorance of youth, but true need biting felt at the height of awareness and intellectual capacity. At the same time, while it is an essential developmental milestone, I believe that its extended presence hinders growth and creative potential. A system that employs techniques whereby need is incorporated into learning could be quite powerful, especially if combined with Socratic disturbance. Educational systems are key to the natures of people and their societies. Theoretical exploration followed up with trial implementation of experimental methods needs to be encouraged a lot more than has been done in any of today's societies. I hope to do some of this work myself...later.
I've been thinking a lot lately about pressure, and the strangeness of that construct, and the incredible variation that exists in people's interactions with it. Stephen King mentions it significantly in his The Langoliers. Maybe I'll come back to it.
As hard as we try to distance ourselves from our origins, parade our transcendence above the physical, the sensory, and the bestial, we cannot but fail. We are cruelly, inexorably linked in reason, emotion, and behavior to our physical state and all material influences upon it. Free will exists, and is a powerful driver of human history and civilization, but in most of our everyday lives, for most of the everyday people, it is but a mirage. Would that knowledge be upsetting? Should it be? What is our need for control, and where does it come from? Is it pride, or is it fear? A sense of and need for agency are built into us neurologically, and I find that fascinating, because there can be no human without it, and yet some are able to recognize that it is often false. Just one more example as to how people are not and cannot be equal, either in their rights or their responsibilities. Controversial, I know. I guess I'll try to address that particular issue in the future as well.
If there is time. Think about that. You do not have the time to do all you wish, to discover all you do not know, to answer every question and fulfill every need, to pass through every experience, sense every sensation, feel every emotion, and think every thought that you ought to. What does that do to your morale? Because mine's not happy about it.
It is important to know want, to become a truly mature and responsible human. And not just know the fleeting desire and the shallow, in the ignorance of youth, but true need biting felt at the height of awareness and intellectual capacity. At the same time, while it is an essential developmental milestone, I believe that its extended presence hinders growth and creative potential. A system that employs techniques whereby need is incorporated into learning could be quite powerful, especially if combined with Socratic disturbance. Educational systems are key to the natures of people and their societies. Theoretical exploration followed up with trial implementation of experimental methods needs to be encouraged a lot more than has been done in any of today's societies. I hope to do some of this work myself...later.
I've been thinking a lot lately about pressure, and the strangeness of that construct, and the incredible variation that exists in people's interactions with it. Stephen King mentions it significantly in his The Langoliers. Maybe I'll come back to it.
As hard as we try to distance ourselves from our origins, parade our transcendence above the physical, the sensory, and the bestial, we cannot but fail. We are cruelly, inexorably linked in reason, emotion, and behavior to our physical state and all material influences upon it. Free will exists, and is a powerful driver of human history and civilization, but in most of our everyday lives, for most of the everyday people, it is but a mirage. Would that knowledge be upsetting? Should it be? What is our need for control, and where does it come from? Is it pride, or is it fear? A sense of and need for agency are built into us neurologically, and I find that fascinating, because there can be no human without it, and yet some are able to recognize that it is often false. Just one more example as to how people are not and cannot be equal, either in their rights or their responsibilities. Controversial, I know. I guess I'll try to address that particular issue in the future as well.
If there is time. Think about that. You do not have the time to do all you wish, to discover all you do not know, to answer every question and fulfill every need, to pass through every experience, sense every sensation, feel every emotion, and think every thought that you ought to. What does that do to your morale? Because mine's not happy about it.
Sunday, February 15, 2009
Pitch
Cannot see, cannot know, cannot feel, no thought, no emotion, no time. What passes? Am I? Too much too soon too fast too good too bad.
Tried to be well, tried to be right. Tried to be more, tried to be all. And with every trial I resent myself more. Tonight, there is no person on earth I can say I like. Tonight, my faith in possibility, my hope for transcendence is gone. Tonight, I cannot respect my self, cannot respect my people, cannot respect my species, and am not impressed with existence. Insignificance permeates my core and renders me paralysed with revulsion at the world. My world. For my world is not your world, and there is no one in it.
Perfection is an illusion, and strife for the high and the good, for the beautiful and the right, for meaning and purpose, is a mockery and a handicap.
This is truth to me, absolute and immutable, as the world stands, and as I stand in who I am and what I am. But there is nothing like failure to draw the thoughts out from the dark recesses of the mind, where they are hidden lest they devour the will and the heart for life. And there is no failure like the failure to satisfy oneself. The disappointment, the frustration, the utter hate for one's incompetence, and the bitter contempt at the surrender of one's ideals, are just the beginning. And there is no hypocrisy greater than the need for self-satisfaction in refuting the ways and lives of the self.
Twisted and uneasy my mind continues to refuse me contentment, and as if conspiring with it, the world veils its beauty and its joys from me, and all that is left in me is fear of life and death in equal measure, and a terror beyond comprehension of an insanity that is all too real in the abysses of my dark hours.
Tried to be well, tried to be right. Tried to be more, tried to be all. And with every trial I resent myself more. Tonight, there is no person on earth I can say I like. Tonight, my faith in possibility, my hope for transcendence is gone. Tonight, I cannot respect my self, cannot respect my people, cannot respect my species, and am not impressed with existence. Insignificance permeates my core and renders me paralysed with revulsion at the world. My world. For my world is not your world, and there is no one in it.
Perfection is an illusion, and strife for the high and the good, for the beautiful and the right, for meaning and purpose, is a mockery and a handicap.
This is truth to me, absolute and immutable, as the world stands, and as I stand in who I am and what I am. But there is nothing like failure to draw the thoughts out from the dark recesses of the mind, where they are hidden lest they devour the will and the heart for life. And there is no failure like the failure to satisfy oneself. The disappointment, the frustration, the utter hate for one's incompetence, and the bitter contempt at the surrender of one's ideals, are just the beginning. And there is no hypocrisy greater than the need for self-satisfaction in refuting the ways and lives of the self.
Twisted and uneasy my mind continues to refuse me contentment, and as if conspiring with it, the world veils its beauty and its joys from me, and all that is left in me is fear of life and death in equal measure, and a terror beyond comprehension of an insanity that is all too real in the abysses of my dark hours.
Sunday, February 8, 2009
2/8/09
False hope is more hurtful than no hope at all. Consideration and respect are things of the past. Honor is quaint, and decency a relic reserved for the eccentrics. All is weighed on the cruel balance of profit and ego, the cost-benefit societal poison.
I should start assuming that everyone I meet is a liar and pretentious two-faced hypocrite. On the rare occasion I'm wrong, it'll be that much sweeter. And since we're assuming things, it seems the healthiest option to assume myself incapable of achieving anything I want from the outset. Do you not find that as soon as you want something it becomes infinitely harder to achieve? And if you were so fortunate as to have the ability to stop caring about, or to kill all desire for it, do you not see that that which you have forsaken comes unbidden? How is that reasonable? What kind of cruel irony is that, and who is laughing? To give of yourself, to be passionate, is to be taken advantage of. And the more you give, the more they will take, until you are nothing but an empty insignificant echo of the full-throated roar of the ocean that was your soul.
And yet there is no nobler way of life. But then who cares about nobility in this brave new age?
I should start assuming that everyone I meet is a liar and pretentious two-faced hypocrite. On the rare occasion I'm wrong, it'll be that much sweeter. And since we're assuming things, it seems the healthiest option to assume myself incapable of achieving anything I want from the outset. Do you not find that as soon as you want something it becomes infinitely harder to achieve? And if you were so fortunate as to have the ability to stop caring about, or to kill all desire for it, do you not see that that which you have forsaken comes unbidden? How is that reasonable? What kind of cruel irony is that, and who is laughing? To give of yourself, to be passionate, is to be taken advantage of. And the more you give, the more they will take, until you are nothing but an empty insignificant echo of the full-throated roar of the ocean that was your soul.
And yet there is no nobler way of life. But then who cares about nobility in this brave new age?
Quotations
"For still there are so many things that I have never seen: in every wood in every spring there is a different green. I sit beside the fire and think of people long ago, and people who will see a world that I shall never know. But all the while I sit and think of times there were before, I listen for returning feet and voices at the door." - J. R. R. Tolkien
‘Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.’ - W. B. Yeats
"There they stood, ranged along the hill-sides, met
To view the last of me, a living frame
For one more picture! in a sheet of flame
I saw them and I knew them all. And yet
Dauntless the slug-horn to my lips I set,
And blew. Childe Roland to the Dark Tower came." - Robert Browning
"Do not go gentle into that good night.
Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light!" - Dylan Thomas
"Beauty is truth, truth beauty- that is all
Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know"
"A thing of beauty is a joy for ever:
Its loveliness increases; it will never
Pass into nothingness; but still will keep
A bower quiet for us, and a sleep
Full of sweet dreams, and health,
and quiet breathing." - John Keats
"Out beyond ideas of right-doing and wrong-doing there is a field. I'll meet you there." - Rumi
"The thought manifests as the word. The word manifests as the deed. The deed develops into habit. And the habit hardens into character. So watch the thought and its ways with care. And let it spring from love, born out of concern for all beings." -Buddha
"When you have reached the mountain top, then shall you begin to climb." - Gibran
I shot a smile into the air
It came to Earth, I know not where,
Perhaps on someone else's face
In some forgotten quiet place.
Perhaps somewhere a sleeping child
Has had a happy dream and smiled
Or some old soul about to die
Has smiled and made a little sigh;
Has sighed a simple final prayer
Which lifts up gently in the air
And flows into the world, so wild,
Perhaps to wake the sleeping child.
‘Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.’ - W. B. Yeats
"There they stood, ranged along the hill-sides, met
To view the last of me, a living frame
For one more picture! in a sheet of flame
I saw them and I knew them all. And yet
Dauntless the slug-horn to my lips I set,
And blew. Childe Roland to the Dark Tower came." - Robert Browning
"Do not go gentle into that good night.
Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light!" - Dylan Thomas
"Beauty is truth, truth beauty- that is all
Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know"
"A thing of beauty is a joy for ever:
Its loveliness increases; it will never
Pass into nothingness; but still will keep
A bower quiet for us, and a sleep
Full of sweet dreams, and health,
and quiet breathing." - John Keats
"Out beyond ideas of right-doing and wrong-doing there is a field. I'll meet you there." - Rumi
"The thought manifests as the word. The word manifests as the deed. The deed develops into habit. And the habit hardens into character. So watch the thought and its ways with care. And let it spring from love, born out of concern for all beings." -Buddha
"When you have reached the mountain top, then shall you begin to climb." - Gibran
I shot a smile into the air
It came to Earth, I know not where,
Perhaps on someone else's face
In some forgotten quiet place.
Perhaps somewhere a sleeping child
Has had a happy dream and smiled
Or some old soul about to die
Has smiled and made a little sigh;
Has sighed a simple final prayer
Which lifts up gently in the air
And flows into the world, so wild,
Perhaps to wake the sleeping child.
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
Catharsis
Well, that previous post was supposed to be a paragraph, take 10 minutes. Ended up being 4 hours, and it's 3am. Let me just remark about how funny it is to me to look over my posts and see that the longer it is, the more disturbed my mental state was when I wrote it. If adversity and evil are truly the inspiration of all greatness and good, does that not make us who work to defeat them criminals against humanity? Not that my post was at all great or good, but generally speaking. Or maybe I am mistaken in my analysis of this coincidence. Maybe it is cathartic expression, and the source is not objective but rather affective. Would be highly annoying though, to admit that psychoanalysis could have gotten anything right.
Monday, February 2, 2009
The Road
Having a blog is harder than having a journal. With a journal you can just give it up and throw it in a drawer never to be seen again. Or feed it to the woodstove. But with this blog every time I decide that's it, this is stupid, never again, someone I never expected to even know me is like, yeah dude, totally read your blog. So here I am. Today has not been kind to my temper. And writing angry is like asking a politician to be straightforward. Completely useless. Let's see what happens.
First, Piaget writes like an AI with programming faults, and his reasoning is like that of a zombie that's had its brain cannibalized. Second, reliability is inseparable from decency in my mind. Which is unfortunate, because I know there are decent people who are unreliable out there, but I can't seem to distinguish them from the rest. I mean, if you make a commitment, you have to do everything and anything you can to honor it, or else what does your commitment and your word mean? Nothing. Sometimes you can't do anything, and that's when you must compensate, or at least admit your failure, and give those who depend on you a chance to rectify it, or help you fight the circumstances under which it can occur.
The reasoning behind the title for this post is my recent obsession with the road and my pining for it. I feel like I truly have a nomadic spirit. I get unhappy if I am in one place for more than a year. I thought, after 10 years of moving almost every year, that I wanted stability, roots. But I want that base the way a Navy fighter jet needs its carrier. The carrier is necessary and much beloved, but the fighter's very purpose and essence lies away from it. There is a thrill to being on the move, and a challenge to every new environment, that makes stability look tame and indolent. But maybe I just think that not only because that is all I have ever really known, but also because I have never really belonged in any place. The closest I have come is obviously Lebanon, and Clark is getting up there, but the connection has always been about the people. And you get to meet such strange people when you travel. Strange is good. Even if it's bad. I feel it builds my identity and strengthens it.
Those who profess individualism and worship it for the most part delude themselves. The sedentary are so vulnerable to the norms and habits and values and routines and lives of those around them. It makes me laugh, how ironic it is that the success of the civilized world is based on a way of life that robs its people of diversity and openness and dynamism. And it makes me wonder, what kind of lifestyle would be most enriching? I am biased in thinking my base-expedition life is, but can one demonstrate this, and theoretically provide the bases of why this should be? Isn't it amazing that an Arab philosopher and historian, Ibn Khaldun, over 600 years ago predicted that sedentary civilizations would prosper and crash in cycles, while more mobile populations would have the societal strength to take advantage of it? And we see today, it is always the populations on the move that really drive fundamental societal change and the progress of civilization. Immigrants are responsible for establishing every country in the world. Newcomers are responsible for the greatest changes in power and national identities, and in the greatest achievements of peoples. The greatest nation on earth is that which is for all intents and purposes a nation of immigrants. So it makes me laugh when some bitterly speak of immigration and of curbing it. I would love to see it happen. Any nation stupid enough to do so will decay and fall into ruin. Just as economic protectionism does not work in the capitalist system, so societal isolation does not work for any known mechanism of cultural formation.
There is so much I could talk about here... Cultural formation in itself is fascinating, and it intrigues me that as far as I know all cultures arise in the same way, and every civilization begins and develops with the same mechanisms. I could talk more about people's xenophobia and its origins. I want to write about 'civilization' and what we mean by that, and about 'identity' and what we mean by THAT. These issues haunt my mind and my life. You don't have to be a traveller to know and experience this dilemma. All you have to do is open your mind up a little bit. Get those mirror neurons working. Use your empathy, for it is a powerful tool of understanding, not only of others, but of yourself. And what is the purpose of self-awareness and intelligence, if we do not use them to understand ourselves; as individuals, as members of a culture, of a society, of civilization, of a species, of life, of reality? What progress have we made along those lines? Why are we preoccupied by petty tangents and materialistic concerns, or even by faith, that ultimate destroyer of reason?
'Know then thyself, presume not God to scan; The proper study of Mankind is Man.' A. Pope
And you should want to know, to feel, the pain and the ignorance of every doubt, of every question, of every agonizing injustice and paralyzing insignificance. You should want the fear, the senselessness, and the purposelessness of it. Touch the thought and hearts of humanity, and endure their ugliness and divine beauty alike, for each in its own measure completes you.
On a separate but related note, this quote just popped into my head. I might do something with it for my next post... Like I need any more to talk about...
'Keep me away from the wisdom which does not cry, the philosophy which does not laugh and the greatness which does not bow before children. ' - Gibran
First, Piaget writes like an AI with programming faults, and his reasoning is like that of a zombie that's had its brain cannibalized. Second, reliability is inseparable from decency in my mind. Which is unfortunate, because I know there are decent people who are unreliable out there, but I can't seem to distinguish them from the rest. I mean, if you make a commitment, you have to do everything and anything you can to honor it, or else what does your commitment and your word mean? Nothing. Sometimes you can't do anything, and that's when you must compensate, or at least admit your failure, and give those who depend on you a chance to rectify it, or help you fight the circumstances under which it can occur.
The reasoning behind the title for this post is my recent obsession with the road and my pining for it. I feel like I truly have a nomadic spirit. I get unhappy if I am in one place for more than a year. I thought, after 10 years of moving almost every year, that I wanted stability, roots. But I want that base the way a Navy fighter jet needs its carrier. The carrier is necessary and much beloved, but the fighter's very purpose and essence lies away from it. There is a thrill to being on the move, and a challenge to every new environment, that makes stability look tame and indolent. But maybe I just think that not only because that is all I have ever really known, but also because I have never really belonged in any place. The closest I have come is obviously Lebanon, and Clark is getting up there, but the connection has always been about the people. And you get to meet such strange people when you travel. Strange is good. Even if it's bad. I feel it builds my identity and strengthens it.
Those who profess individualism and worship it for the most part delude themselves. The sedentary are so vulnerable to the norms and habits and values and routines and lives of those around them. It makes me laugh, how ironic it is that the success of the civilized world is based on a way of life that robs its people of diversity and openness and dynamism. And it makes me wonder, what kind of lifestyle would be most enriching? I am biased in thinking my base-expedition life is, but can one demonstrate this, and theoretically provide the bases of why this should be? Isn't it amazing that an Arab philosopher and historian, Ibn Khaldun, over 600 years ago predicted that sedentary civilizations would prosper and crash in cycles, while more mobile populations would have the societal strength to take advantage of it? And we see today, it is always the populations on the move that really drive fundamental societal change and the progress of civilization. Immigrants are responsible for establishing every country in the world. Newcomers are responsible for the greatest changes in power and national identities, and in the greatest achievements of peoples. The greatest nation on earth is that which is for all intents and purposes a nation of immigrants. So it makes me laugh when some bitterly speak of immigration and of curbing it. I would love to see it happen. Any nation stupid enough to do so will decay and fall into ruin. Just as economic protectionism does not work in the capitalist system, so societal isolation does not work for any known mechanism of cultural formation.
There is so much I could talk about here... Cultural formation in itself is fascinating, and it intrigues me that as far as I know all cultures arise in the same way, and every civilization begins and develops with the same mechanisms. I could talk more about people's xenophobia and its origins. I want to write about 'civilization' and what we mean by that, and about 'identity' and what we mean by THAT. These issues haunt my mind and my life. You don't have to be a traveller to know and experience this dilemma. All you have to do is open your mind up a little bit. Get those mirror neurons working. Use your empathy, for it is a powerful tool of understanding, not only of others, but of yourself. And what is the purpose of self-awareness and intelligence, if we do not use them to understand ourselves; as individuals, as members of a culture, of a society, of civilization, of a species, of life, of reality? What progress have we made along those lines? Why are we preoccupied by petty tangents and materialistic concerns, or even by faith, that ultimate destroyer of reason?
'Know then thyself, presume not God to scan; The proper study of Mankind is Man.' A. Pope
And you should want to know, to feel, the pain and the ignorance of every doubt, of every question, of every agonizing injustice and paralyzing insignificance. You should want the fear, the senselessness, and the purposelessness of it. Touch the thought and hearts of humanity, and endure their ugliness and divine beauty alike, for each in its own measure completes you.
On a separate but related note, this quote just popped into my head. I might do something with it for my next post... Like I need any more to talk about...
'Keep me away from the wisdom which does not cry, the philosophy which does not laugh and the greatness which does not bow before children. ' - Gibran
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