Friday, September 24, 2021

The Journals of Lewis & Clark edited by Bernard DeVoto, r. Sep. 2021

 p. xi DeVoto was not a cloistered scholar. He got out on the trail, by canoe, by foot, on horseback. He traveled where the captains did, saw what they saw, and argued for the conservation of their world. One of his favorite sites was on the Lolo Trail in Idaho, just over the Continental Divide at Lolo Pass, along today's U.S. Highway 12, in a magnificent grove of giant cedars beside the fast-flowing Lochsa River. There he liked to pitch his tent and think about the captains. There, on an early spring day in 1956, his ashes were scattered. The site today is marked by the state of Idaho as the Bernard DeVoto Grove and is maintained as it was when Lewis and Clark came through.

p. liii ...and nearly all of it was in country foreign to the wilderness experience of Americans and requiring radically different techniques. Not only the Rocky Mountains, their rivers, and the Cascade Mountains were unprecedented and unimaginable; so were the high plains, the high plateaus, the overwhelming waters of the Columbia, the tremendous forest of the Northwest, and the sodden winter climate there. It added up to a strangeness for which nothing in the previous frontier culture was a preparation.

p. 426 THURSDAY JULY 17TH 1806. I arrose this morning and made a drawing of the falls, after which we took breakfast and departed. it being my design to strike Maria's river about the place at which I left it on my return to it's mouth in the beginning of June 1805. I steered my course through the wide and level plains which have somewhat the appearance of an ocean, not a tree nor a shrub to be seen. 

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

The Overstory by Richard Powers, r. Aug. 2021

p. 11 When nothing else of his little postage stamp of Iowa is left to photograph, John turns his camera on the Hoel Chestnut, his exact coeval.

p. 20 At school in Chicago, he learned many things: 1. Human history was the story of increasingly disoriented hunger.

p. 85 Mountains hem him in on three sides. The only TV reception he can get is the ant races. And still a part of him wants to know if his few and private thoughts might in fact be ratified by someone, somewhere. The confirmation of others: a sickness the entire race will die of.

P. 103 A [tree is a] colossal, rising, reaching, stretching space elevator of a billion independent parts, shuttling the air into the sky and storing the sky deep underground, sorting possibility from out of nothing: the most perfect piece of self-writing code that his eyes could hope to see.

p. 114 The parchment-colored leaves riding out the winter - marcescent, he tells her - shining out against the neighboring bare hardwoods.

p. 120 She's not of the herd. She doesn't always hear them well, and when she does, their words don't always make sense. And yet her frantic fellow mammals do make her smile: miracles on all sides, and still they need compliments to keep them happy.

p. 125 The postdoc turns into an adjunct position. She makes almost nothing, but life requires little. Her budget is blessedly free of those two core expenses, entertainment and status.

p. 171 Through the front glass doors of the truck stop, Olivia sees the dozens of gas pumps, and beyond them, the flat expanse of I-80 in the dawn, the snowcapped fields, the endless hostage swap of travelers east and west.... The sky does amazing things. It bruises a little in the freedom of the west, while to the east it spills open like a pomegranate.

p. 210 Falling asleep, he rereads the same paragraph a dozen times; the words turn into twirling things, like winged seeds spinning in the air.

p. 220 A path cuts under the spires lit by late winter's moon, a path she walks almost nightly, out and back like that old palindrome: La ruta nos aportó otro paso natural.

p. 324 Memorial service, at two hundred feet. Adam recalls something he learned in graduate school: memory is always a collaboration in progress.

p. 358 But people have no idea what time is. They think it's a line, spinning out from three seconds behind them, then vanishing just as fast into the three seconds of fog just ahead. They can't see that time is one spreading ring wrapped around another, outward and outward until the thinnest skin of Now depends for its being on the enormous mass of everything that has already died.

p. 379 The product here [in the Amazon fulfillment center] is not so much books as that goal of ten thousand years of history, the thing the human brain craves above all else and nature will die refusing to give: convenience. Ease is the disease and Nick is its vector. His employers are a virus that will one day live symbiotically inside everyone. Once you've bought a novel in your pajamas, there's no turning back.

p. 383 To be human is to confuse a satisfying story with a meaningful one, and to mistake life for something huge with two legs. No: life is mobilized on a vastly larger scale, and the world is failing precisely because no novel can make the contest for the world seem as compelling as the struggles between a few lost people.

p. 392 He'll never get used to [Colorado]. It's way too cheery, cold, and dry - the harshest kind of Oz. He finds it unnatural, all the aspens and sun. Not a tree out here taller than an adolescent hemlock back home [in California].

p. 423 No one sees trees. We see fruit, we see nuts, we see wood, we see shade. We see ornaments or pretty fall foliage. Obstacles blocking the road or wrecking the ski slope. Dark, threatening places that must be cleared. We see branches about to crush our roof. We see a cash crop. But trees - trees are invisible.

p. 443 They sit together in the evening, reading and looking, as the sun glints chartreuse off their chestnut's scalloped leaves. Every baring twig seems to Dorothy like a trial creature, apart from but part of all the others. She sees in the chestnut's branching the several speculative paths of a lived life, all the people she might have been, the ones she could or will yet be, in worlds spreading out just alongside this one.

p. 445 She sits in a chair against the wall in a corner of the meeting area. A board of glowing letters across the concourse reads Boston Boston Chicago Chicago Chicago Dallas Dallas... Human goings. Human doings. Ever faster, ever fuller, ever more mobile, ever more empowered.

p. 465 There's a beech in Ohio Patricia would like to see again. Of all the trees she'll miss like breathing, a simple, smooth-boled beech with nothing special to it except a notch on its trunk four feet up from the ground. Maybe it has thrived. Maybe the sun and rain and air have been good to it. She thinks: Maybe we want to hurt trees so much because they live so much longer than we do.

p. 481 Dams break and memories flood him, like the million keyholes of light coming down through the palms of a horse chestnut.

p. 496 He pushes the joystick on the chair and rolls out of the lab into the mild night. The air is spiced with bay laurel and lemon eucalyptus and pepper trees. The scent retrieves all kinds of things he once knew and reminds him of all those things he never will. He breathes in for a long time. Phenomenal, to be such a small, weak, short-lived being on a planet with billions of years left to run.

Wednesday, August 18, 2021

The Practice by Seth Godin, r. Aug. 2021

p. 22 Our passion is simply the work we've trusted ourselves to do.... The trap is this: only after we do the difficult work does it become our calling. Only after we trust the process does it become our passion. "Do what you love" is for amateurs. "Love what you do" is the mantra for professionals.

p. 33 It's not important that the kids developed their musical skills when they were eleven. It's important that they developed the habit of identity. When they looked in the mirror, they saw themselves as musicians, as artists, as people who had committed to a journey.

p. 64 Generosity is the most direct way to find the practice. Generosity subverts resistance by focusing the work on someone else. Generosity means that we don't have to seek reassurance for the self, but can instead concentrate on serving others. It activates a different part of our brain and gives us a more meaningful way forward. People don't want to be selfish, and giving in to resistance when you're doing generous work feels selfish.

p. 68 Positive people are more likely to enjoy the practice. They're not wasting any time experiencing failure in advance.

Monday, July 19, 2021

Greenlights by Matthew McConaughey, r. Jul. 2021

- Creativity needs borders. Individuality needs resistance. The Earth needs gravity. Without them there is no form. No art. Only chaos.

- When you can, ask yourself if you want to, before you do.

- Common sense is like money and health: once you have it, you gotta work to keep it.

Monday, May 31, 2021

O Papai é Pop por Marcos Piangers, l. maio 2021

 p. 38 Ah, estão lá. Você então gritará para suas filhas que virão correndo e esbarrando nas pessoas, todas elas muito civilizadas e considerando você um péssimo pai. Você pagará o estacionamento com a mais nova no colo, a mais velha, feliz com seu niddles, tentará entrar no carro com o outro carro colado ao seu, ouvirá os choros de protesto da mais nova na cadeirinha, aguardará a cancela abrir e estará novamente em contato com o ar puro, o sol, os pássaros. Você abrirá o vidro e entrará uma brisa suave. No rádio estará tocando um jazz gostoso, os motoristas darão passagem e o trânsito fluirá com calm, mas constância. Você olhará pelo retrovisor e verá duas crianças felizes, olhando a paisagem.    E, naquele moment, você será a pessoa mais feliz do mundo.

p. 93 Cada dia, por saber que é amada e protegida, fica mais difícil surpreendê-la com um carinho e, dessa forma, descolar um sorrisinho. Aquelas risadas altas estão cada vez mais caras, passando da cotação "mero barulhinho com a boca" para "arremesso de criança o mais alto possível". O preço da risada passa por um período de inflação descontrolada.

Sunday, March 28, 2021

The Silence by Don DeLillo, r. Mar. 2021

 p. 65 "The semi-darkness. It's somewhere in the mass mind," Martin said. "The pause, the sense of having experienced this before. Some kind of natural breakdown or foreign intrusion. A cautionary sense that we inherit from our grandparents or great-grandparents or back beyond. People in the grip of serious threat."

p. 72 Was each a mystery to the others, however close their involvement, each individual so naturally encased that he or she escaped a final determination, a fixed appraisal by the others in the room?

p. 113 "Is it natural at a time like this to be thinking and talking in philosophical terms as some of us have been doing? Or should we be practical? Food, shelter, friends, flush the toilet if we can? Tend to the simplest physical things. Touch, feel, bite, chew. The body has a mind of its own."

p. 115 "The world is everything, the individual nothing. Do we all understand that?"


Monday, March 22, 2021

King Lear by William Shakespeare, r. Mar. 2021

 p. 36 EDMUND: This is the excellent foppery of the world that when we are sick in fortune - often the surfeit of our own behavior - we make guilty of our disasters the sun, the moon, and the stars, as if we were villains by necessity, fools by heavenly compulsion, knaves, thieves, and treachers by spherical predominance, drunkards, liars, and adulterers by an enforced obedience of planetary influence, and all that we are evil in by a divine thrusting-on.

p. 74 ALBANY: How far your eyes may pierce I cannot tell. / Striving to better, oft we mar what's well.

Sunday, January 3, 2021

Tim Ferriss Podcast with Seth Godin (#476), l. Jan. 2021

"Once we know how the trick is done, it’s simply a trick. The magic evaporates and in the case of great writing, great customer service, great theater, the first time you experience it, the unexpected moment when lights turn on for you, I want to call that magic .... I believe that now that we’ve got AI and robots and offshoring and the rest, the work that’s left for us is the work to create magic."

"Marshall Sahlins wrote a breakthrough book in the ’60s called Stone Age Economics. It is about what it was like to be a caveman. It turns out that cavemen, who in my view were wearing these horrible Flintstones-like clothes and barely surviving, only worked three hours a day. They spent the rest of their time being present and alive and with their family, and all the things people say they want to do more of. What’s fascinating to me about that is lots of the people that you and I know, who go to work and just dig it out day after day, don’t do it because they need more money. They are seeking some sort of status, some sort of emotional engagement, some sort of energy, but they forget along the way, because they signed up for this other game, that there’s the game one can play of, “Wow that really was cool what I just made. That fills me with joy. I just did something generous. I just connected with someone at an elemental level.” But they’re too busy playing somebody else’s game to play that game."

https://tim.blog/2020/10/29/seth-godin-the-practice-transcript/