• About

is this anything

~ a compendium, by Nancy Coughlin

is this anything

Tag Archives: illusion

In these times (a poem)

01 Thursday Dec 2016

Posted by is this anything in poem, Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

hope, illusion, politics, zen

false_hope_by_astridle

In these times

I’m fifty-eight. You’d think I’d know by now
these lessons I keep having to relearn.
The latest, loudest fact: the earth sags low
beneath the weight of idiots who mourn

an age that never was. And am I one
of them? Again, my trademark insipidity:
that life is good—and people too–deep down.
I’m Anne Frank in the annex, always pre-

annihilated, trapped in reckless faith–
“in spite of everything”–that men are good.
(Her “everything,” like mine, included death
but not the grin beneath the hangman’s hood.)

I fear my hope more than I fear my dread.
I think like children think, forever caught
in fairy tale, in prayers my mother said,
in “progress,” in “my country,” in the thought

that savagery’s a glitch, a rare malfunction.
What will it take, I wonder, to dispel
my dull naivety? My own extinction?
Or is delusion requisite to hell?

I feel you now (poem)

07 Friday Oct 2016

Posted by is this anything in poem

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

apophenia, grief, illusion, imkertje, loss, love, poem

twins

I feel you now
(aan mijn imkertje)

I prayed you’d let me feel your presence here
as fiercely as I feel your absence. You,
imaginary guru, heard this plea,
condoned my wish. I feel you now, more true

than life, for even as I take my rest
in you, I’m wrested thence. I’m all at once:
so utterly aggrieved, so thickly blessed–
so blinded by your panoramic glance.

aperture (quote from Alan Watts)

27 Monday Jun 2016

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

alan watts, awareness, illusion, mindfulness, no-mind, quotation, transience, zen

You are an aperture through which the universe is looking at and exploring itself. ― Alan Wattsdew flowers

The odd things we love, when we love (a poem)

11 Wednesday May 2016

Posted by is this anything in poem

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

apophenia, cats, choice, dogs, illusion, love, marriage, metaphor, poem, surrender, transience, wanda gag

 

dogs

The odd things we love, when we love

Henry cares only for films about humans. Except
when he’s high, when he garners delight and soft
consolation from the documentary adventures

of other mammals. Dogs, in particular, warm his
weary cockles. He loves dogs more than any lover
of dogs I’ve known before, and I don’t mind telling you,

I’ve known my share. If I had nothing else to love
him for (but really there are ninety-seven things,
which I intend to list ad nauseam in future poems–

stay tuned!), I’d love him merely for his earnest
love of dogs.        And yet, if one day he went mad,
and started loving cats (against which I hold nothing,

due to allergy), I’d click my heels and spin around, and
love his love of cats. Because, you know, that’s how
we got here. That’s how it’s worked, so far. Ailuromania*,

to give but one example, becomes just the thing at hand,
the current metaphor: a pin, a peg, a cross, a stake,
a nail–a strong, convenient hook to hang our love on.

millions-of-cats-man2

*ailuromania: a passion for cats

not one (a tweet)

06 Monday Apr 2015

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

illusion, memoir, writing, zen

shining-flashlight-onto-moon-at-night

I’ve written so many words in my life that it’s getting harder to forget that not one of them is true.

obstacle (a tweet)

23 Monday Mar 2015

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

illusion, surrender, tweet, zen

Sometimes I think the world will always remain just one big, blind yes away from seeing itself clearly.

girl hiding eyes

everything (a quote from Goethe)

27 Friday Feb 2015

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

apophenia, both, goethe, illusion, paradox, quotation, serendipity

messy face

Everything is both simpler than we can imagine and more entangled than we can conceive.   –Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

recognition (a quotation from Blaise Pascal)

26 Thursday Feb 2015

Posted by is this anything in quotation, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

balance, both, illusion, pascal, quotation, reason, zen

nothing stoneThe last function of reason is to recognize that there are an infinity of things which surpass it. –Blaise Pascal

echo (thinking out loud)

17 Tuesday Feb 2015

Posted by is this anything in random thought, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

balance, grief, illusion, love, thinking out loud, transience

In every hello, there’s an echo of goodbye. (And in every goodbye, a hello? …Don’t know.)old people

reality (a quote from Verdi)

27 Tuesday Jan 2015

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

giuseppe verdi, illusion, imagination, quotation, reality, transience, writing

ladybug-dandelion-perfect-timing

It may be a good thing to copy reality; but to invent reality is much, much better. –Giuseppe Verdi

to fall (quote from Jorge Luis Borges)

21 Sunday Dec 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

apophenia, illusion, Jorge Luis Borges, love, quotation, transience

 

bachalpsee-bachse-lake-switzerland

To fall in love is to create a religion that has a fallible god.  –Jorge Luis Borges

life hack (a tweet)

14 Sunday Dec 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

family, freedom, happiness, illusion, love, marriage, music, serenity

patty duke

Singing around the house is a good way to talk to yourself without people knowing you talk to yourself. #zen #Lifehack

 

the same (a tweet)

14 Sunday Dec 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

balance, compassion, illusion, love, paradox, zen

Buddha seatbelt

Self-reminder: we are all the same in everything but form.

soothing (a tweet)

09 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

apophenia, balance, comfort, happiness, illusion, love, randomness, serenity, yin yang, zen

cars road

I like, tonight, just hearing the cars go up and down the hill. I’ve always been a huge fan of the Doppler Effect.

“Genesis According to George Segal” (a poem by Robert Pinsky)

09 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by is this anything in poem, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

acceptance, balance, compassion, dust, genesis, george segal, grace, illusion, imkertje, loss, love, poetry, robert pinsky, serenity, surrender, time, transience, truth, zen

 

george segal art

Above: “Street Crossing” (1992) by the American artist George Segal (1924-2000)

Robert Pinsky’s “Genesis According to George Segal”

The Spirit brooded on the water and made
The earth, and molded us out of earth. And then
The Spirit breathed Itself into our nostrils—

And rested. What was the Spirit waiting for?
An image of Its nature, a looking glass?
Glass also made of dust, of sand and fire.

Ordinary, enigmatic, we people waiting
In the terminal. A survivor at a wire fence,
Also waiting. Behind him, a tangle of bodies

Made out of plaster, which plasterers call mud.
The apprentice hurries with a hod of mud.
Particulate sand for glass. Milled flour for bread.

What are we waiting for? The hour glass
That measures all our time in trickling dust
Is also of dust and will return to dust—

So an old poem says. Men in a bread line
Out in the dusty street are silent, waiting
At the apportioning-place of daily bread.

At an old-fashioned radio’s wooden case
A man sits listening in a wooden chair.
A woman at a butcher block waits to cut.

What are we waiting for, in clouds of dust?
Or waiting for the past, particles of being
Settled and moist with life, then brittle again.

————————————————-

Extra cool thing: Robert Pinsky reads this poem aloud here:

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/12/15/genesis-according-george-segal?mbid=social_twitter

 

noteworthy (quote from Alan Watts)

19 Sunday Oct 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

alan watts, apophenia, balance, both, illusion, patternicity, zen

Llama-photobombs-the-kiss-scene-resizecrop--

“We ignore all kinds of things because we notice only what we think noteworthy. And therefore our version of everything is highly selective. We pick out certain things and say that’s what’s there, just as we select and notice the figure rather than the background.” –Alan Watts

useful fiction (a poem-like thing)

17 Friday Oct 2014

Posted by is this anything in poem

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

both, illusion, paradox, serenity, slice of life, thinking out loud, time, yin yang, zen

AliceDownHole

To Time, sweet illusion so helpful when wanting
to taste something new or again.
Without you who knows how I’d write my next sentence:
I’d lose me in everywhen.

miracles (thinking out loud)

09 Thursday Oct 2014

Posted by is this anything in journal entry, random thought

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

apophenia, illusion, journal, miracle, serendipity, subjectivity, thinking out loud, writing, zen

Journal excerpt from November 11, 2013:

….We seem to think we need “miracles” to support our faith in the eternal. But what we really seem to be asking for are NEW miracles: weird stuff we’ve never seen before, like, I don’t know, the Second Coming, or a talking cow. But how must it have felt, and how it must still feel to every child—oh, what a miracle FIRE must always seem to anyone first discovering it.

hanks2

more (a quote from Ram Dass)

07 Tuesday Oct 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

awareness, balance, both, freedom, grace, illusion, quotation, slice of life, transience, zen

“Learn to watch your drama unfold while at the same time knowing you are more than your drama.” ―Ram Dass

cat knife

Debt (a short story)

01 Wednesday Oct 2014

Posted by is this anything in short story

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

acceptance, choice, fiction, grace, helplessness, illusion, imbalance, loss, love, memory, short story, time, transience, writing

separation1

Debt

I’ve never been the sort who closes doors on the past. Or, no, that’s not true. I close doors all the time–I just don’t keep them locked. My lifeworn family, ancient friends, antediluvian lovers–even the most distant and/or catastrophic of these relationships is like a bank account I still keep a little money in. (The minimum balance, sometimes: barely enough to warrant the paperwork.) And now and then—to my own surprise, usually—I’ll make a small deposit, or even, rarely, a withdrawal. I’ll look up a friend I haven’t talked to in many years and renew the correspondence for a little while before eventually, inevitably, I let it lapse again.

Late last summer I drove my daughter Becky to her freshman year at Eden College (as they might as well call it): a liberal-arts utopia blooming with marigolds, nasturtiums, and a left-wing agenda so unabashedly radical that it left me nostalgic for a world I’d thought had been eroded away–by time, by parody–years ago. To me the campus seemed a bubble, an oasis. At the very least, it was a clever and durable mirage, thriving, as it seemed, in the midst of a ramshackle, foreclosure-mottled Illinois town that had dried up when the Maytag plant closed–moved operations to Mexico–in 2004. Living as I did (and do) in a similarly dried-up Montana town (copper mine, Chile, 1983), I’d developed a bedouin’s gratitude for oases, not to mention a knack for finding them everywhere, whether they existed or not.

I was driving home from Eden now. For the first hour I cried and cried, because Becky is my beloved, my only child, and this would be my first year living far from her. Then for the ten or twelve hours of driving that followed the first, I listened to an audiobook of Lolita, as read–as insinuated–by Jeremy Irons, which slowly, inexorably, made me feel better.

I-90 took me through the heart of South Dakota, and, feeling so suddenly on the brim of a new life (it was too soon to tell, but already I felt myself tingling with my own genesis), I acted on an idea that had been simmering in my mind for a while—ever since I’d realized the college trip would take me through that part of the country. From my hotel in Rapid City I called up a boyfriend—a fiancé, to be more precise than need be, and my first real love—from thirty years ago.

We’d ended badly. No need to go into the how and why. I’m not even sure I need acknowledge that our break-up was entirely my fault–though it was, it was. Still, even without having seen him in all this time, that old bank account (to renew that yawnful metaphor) still felt open to me. I’d discovered his whereabouts and phone number via the internet, of course, though they’d been tougher than usual to find because his first and last name are both very common. But I’d always figured he’d eventually moved back to South Dakota, where his roots were. And so, it turned out, he had. I found him–the man I knew for sure was him–via a record of his $650 contribution to a (doomed) South Dakota senatorial campaign back in 2010.

So I called him–why not–and we ended up meeting for lunch the next day at the hotel/casino where he works as some sort of business manager. And it went fine—a bit lackluster, of course, since it’s almost always true that people I haven’t seen since we were younger turn out to have mellowed so much more than I have. Or maybe they’ve simply learned that useful skill of emotional caution that I’ve never been able—or, I guess, willing—to develop in myself. They see the past as having happened long ago, I think, whereas I seem, especially in contrast, to still be living it. It’s surely very easy for people to get the idea that I’ve never stopped thinking of them, even maybe that I’m obsessed, I don’t know. They must sense my yearning to re-engage them in moments we once shared—inside jokes, surprises, conflicts, turning points, endings.

I’m always on the threshold of asking—and sometimes I actually do ask: Remember that time when you said that thing? What did you mean when you said that? And how did you feel when I didn’t answer you right away, or later when I made a joke of it? Or how about that Thanksgiving at my house—remember how when you met my dad you were wearing your “Fuck Authority” (or something facsimilar) t-shirt? What was your impression of how that meeting went? And then, that night maybe a year later when–in the argument that ended us–I told you that I’d been sleeping with your best friend [trite but true], and you told me later that if you’d had a gun you would have killed yourself, did you mean that? Oh, honey, did you mean it literally, I mean, and does that distinction even matter, really? And how did you finally get past it all—by repression, forgetting, surrender? Or is there some other way I haven’t managed to learn yet?

Moreover (I want to ask but don’t, quite, which is why I’m asking now, I suppose), did you know that I spent a whole year mourning the end of us? That I would do my work, endure my social obligations, and then any time I had even a half-hour just to myself, I’d take that time to cry and cry? A whole year of that, almost to the day. You, in fact, were the impetus for my learning how to cry without making any noise. I was living with those people then, you may remember, and so I came to learn that skill, because of you. And it’s come in very handy in all the time that’s come and gone since, and I’m sincere when I say “thank you” for it.

I was twenty-one at the time. You were the first real loss I’d ever known, and you taught me how to be overwhelmed by grief and yet not—not what? Not die, for sure—but more important, not fold, not dry up: you taught me the art of going through life’s motions even when they feel completely meaningless. It was my first lesson—and there’ve been so many others along the way since, and surely many more on the road ahead—you taught me my first lesson in giving up while still going on, in surrendering without dying. You also taught me how time works—the ways it heals you, the scars it leaves. These were teachings that would come in so very handy in the thirty years that followed you, even to the point where I no longer need to tell you, or anyone, exactly when and how.

And here you are, sitting across from me now in your suit and tie, but your hair—which was graying even back then, I think—is still as bushy, as on the very brink of revolt, as ever. No beard, though. I miss the beard—you look a little empty without it. But of course you’re not empty. I saw your photographs on-line. I’d totally forgotten– or did I ever know?– how you loved photography, and also how in tune you were with nature, with all things wild, rustic, weathered, overgrown. (How did we end up together, honey, when I’m so obviously an “indoor” girl?) It turns out you’re in love with the way the mountains look at sunrise—and I suppose if I were to allow myself one resentment, it would be of the way you always let me sleep so late in the mornings. I wish you’d led the way more often. I wish I’d let you lead the way. But I know that whenever you tried to lead, I dragged my feet. So, no, that’s not your fault either, now that I think it through. And your political views are still so radical (this part of you remains as untamable as your hair)—that much is obvious just from your Facebook links. Still, for all that, my dad seemed to really like you—and I’m not sure whether that suggests something I never knew about him, or will never know about you, or, most likely, both never-knowings at once.

So here I am with you—with this guy, really, this middle-aged man whom I’d had to struggle to recognize through the bars of the cashier’s cage in the casino lobby, and who’d probably had to contain a certain visceral shock when he glanced out to find me there, the frowzy old me I’ve become, I mean. And it turns out, during the brief moments in our lunch-talk that aren’t, more or less, awkward, or, worse, pedestrian, that you’ve spent your life-since-me learning your own, completely separate lessons.

You talk, too briefly, about your own father, how it took you years to realize how rotten he’d been. And of course my first thought is to feel bad that I hadn’t seen this myself in those old days, that I couldn’t have studied the situation, then told you how things really were­­–not to brag, but I’m actually quite good at disillusioning people about their parents, just ask my husband—so you could get on sooner with the hard-labor process of letting him go. I never met your father, of course, and I don’t remember that you talked about him much back then. But still I must somehow have glimpsed him. I know this because when I think of him, and even when I think his name, “Emmett,” he appears (as if by lightning flash) as a tall slab of gray-black stone jutting upright out of dull mountain fog. He and Faulkner’s Abner Snopes are stored in the very same English-major memory cell; they share the same trope, form the same unyielding monolith in my mind, every time I remember them.

So he was why you finally got your law degree, and he was why you didn’t, even more finally, remain a lawyer. He was the reason you took all that time off from school to work for the railroad and the highway crew, two jobs that get mixed up in my mind, as if they were one single job, and all I really know about them is that you came home every night coated with tar. I’m sorry about that too—about not knowing more than that, I mean. I should have been paying attention, should have asked you why you took those jobs, and not only that, why they seemed to center you, make you feel worthy, make you feel at home, in ways that neither law school nor I myself ever could.

While I’m on a roll: I shouldn’t have felt so perpetually shamed by your general lack of shame, or by the way you never had money or a working car. I should have honored the way you kept trying to define yourself as yourself, and not merely as the opposite of someone else, which was the only way I myself knew how to do that sort of thing at the time. That frankness of yours—that grin you flashed as you watched me undress. The thin lines of asphalt that came to seem permanent, like tiny, curved tattoos beneath your fingernails. Instead I was embarrassed by your earthiness, embarrassed by you. How often I must have reddened, sighed, nagged, clenched my teeth, blurted it all out. I found you vulgar at a time when I was working hard–via the taintless, scentless breeze of “art”—to transcend my own inborn vulgarity. Still, however much I pretended otherwise, I’d come from the same hard world you did, which is probably why, from our very first conversation (on the landing between the second and third floors of our dormitory, and me very drunk on my twentieth birthday) you seemed so utterly familiar to me, so like home—and which, come to think of it, may be one among several remarkable reasons that my dad (who hardly ever liked anyone, by the way) liked you so very much.

And all this is occurring to me for the first time right now, honey, as I’m telling it to you.

 

grok* (journal entry)

22 Monday Sep 2014

Posted by is this anything in journal entry

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

acceptance, apophenia, autism, choice, comfort, family, grief, grokking, Hannah, illusion, journal, loss, love, memory, metaphor, motherhood, quote, robert heinlein, serendipity, slice of life, thinking out loud, zen

 

vintage-packaging-flower-seed-packets-from-thes_icnfe_4

(http://thepackaginginsider.com/vintage-packaging-flower-seed-packets-from-the-1800s/) (lovely!)

Journal entry, August 28, 2014

Cleaning house yesterday, on a forgotten shelf I found a shirt of Hannah’s. A stretchy Goodwill t-shirt, powder blue, with folksy flower-seed-packet art on the front. Minor stains, of course, plus a hole in the back collar where someone (I?) had clumsily lopped off the tag. [Shirt tags made Hannah itch.] I held the shirt to my face and breathed it in like an idiot seeking the flowers. But no, it was just that the shirtfront–and then the shirt’s inside–was the only part that hadn’t been exposed to nine years of dust.

And I believed the shirt still smelled like Hannah, believed that I could know–could grok*–her presence, her self, merely through these greedy inhalations of not-quite-random air. I sat on my bedroom floor and pulled the shirt onto my head (think of a blind bank-robber), and then, to a point far past absurdity and fast approaching asphyxia, I breathed in and out its ineffably Hannah smell. (Must, dust, detergent, every mundane staleness, but something of her there too–something.) I chose to feel myself awash in her essence. As in the many dreams I’d dreamed, hope-caught, throughout her life, I felt free once more to slip beneath the surface of Hannah’s embryonic, oceanic world, and to breathe, however feebly, underwater.

I chose to feel–and to believe–all this on such a primal level that the mind had no clue of the choice till it was made. But with a shrug, quite used by now to the heart’s vagaries, the mind humored us both. I nuzzled for one last deep second against the thread-worn seams that defined the shirt’s armpits. Then I pulled the shirt off and held it awhile. I dusted it, refolded it, and–ah, my darling girl, now what to do? Replace it on the forgotten shelf? Cleave it into rags? Throw it away? I couldn’t, can’t, decide this yet.

Ah yes, but still, how well I know: let go, let go, let go, let go.

——

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grok:

*Grok /ˈɡrɒk/ is a word coined by Robert A. Heinlein for his 1961 science-fiction novel, Stranger in a Strange Land, where it is defined as follows:

Grok means to understand so thoroughly that the observer becomes a part of the observed—to merge, blend, intermarry, lose identity in group experience. It means almost everything that we mean by religion, philosophy, and science—and it means as little to us (because of our Earthling assumptions) as color means to a blind man.

reminder: stay surprisable (a tweet)

18 Thursday Sep 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

absurdity, apophenia, autism, both, coincidence, happiness, illusion, miracle, paradox, randomness, serendipity, surprise, surrender, zen

If I’m not careful, I’ll waste an absurd amount of time finding only those things I’m already looking for.
giraffe road

apophenia in writing (random thoughts)

06 Saturday Sep 2014

Posted by is this anything in Evolving ideas, random thought

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

apophenia, both, coincidence, comfort, creativity, freedom, helplessness, illusion, memoir, memory, pareidolia, pattern, randomness, surrender, synchronicity, thinking out loud, writing, zen

fish constellation

The art of accident, the accident of art. Serendipity. Synchronicity. Coincidence. Luck. A world in which “success” and “failure” coexist. Where what feels like choice, also feels like surrender. Finding patterns in wallpaper, a piece of toast, the relative positions of stars–how different is this from configuring a unified plot from my life’s for-all-I-know random moments? Writing a memoir (writing anything) is an exercise in what I want to call “the management of apophenia.” Apophenia: the innate human tendency to find patterns in randomness. Michael Shermer, who wrote The Believing Brain, calls it “patternicity.” (Note to self: maybe I should too?)

So, “managing apophenia.” As far as I can gather, it’s the same practice as what I’ve heard other people call “harnessing serendipity.” At any rate, as I write this book I watch myself collate, from what may well have been a haphazard life, only those moments that my apophenic mind has singled out as vital to my “story”–and meanwhile viewing a million other moments as extraneous, as ignorable white noise. And how many events have I forgotten entirely, or never truly experienced as they happened, because they didn’t fit my evolving, concocted self-narrative? What details have I left out of focus, in the blurry background of the photo? (And don’t get me started on all the things that might have happened to me but happened not to happen.)

Without knowing it, I’ve spent my life culling memories, leaving only those that befit my apophenic self-vision. It’s what we all do, I imagine. It’s how we remember and distinguish ourselves as selves instead of hapless, nameless waves in an indifferent ocean. This is how we make “sense” of it all. When we view the night sky we have two basic choices: to be dumbstruck by chaotic infinity, or to superimpose a mythology.

The trick of it all, it seems to me, is to recognize and manage our innate search for patterns. The first step must be to comprehend that the patterns are indeed self-created, and not (necessarily) objectively “real.” But reality, of course, is a bit overrated. Sometimes a useful fiction gets you farther than a useless truth. We were born to invent a world out of random flecks of residue. The trick, now, is to waken to the whole of it, to understand that background and foreground, importance and trivia, failure and success, are objectively meaningless, so you might as well train your eyes to locate patterns that might help you best explain your myth, metaphorize your story.

bewitched (a quote by Alan Watts)

06 Saturday Sep 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

alan watts, autism, illusion, imbalance, play, quotation, words, writing, zen

We are all bewitched by words. We confuse them with the real world, and try to live in the real world as if it were the world of words.   –Alan Watts

fern water

pareidolia in art (quote from Leonardo da Vinci)

17 Sunday Aug 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation, random thought

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

accident, apophenia, art, both, coincidence, freedom, illusion, James Lawley, Leonardo da Vinci, metaphor, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, pareidolia, quotation, randomness, serendipity, transience, wabi sabi, writing, zen

[Pareidolia is ‘a psychological phenomenon involving a vague and random stimulus (often an image or sound) being perceived as significant, a form of apophenia.’]

From wikipedia:  In his notebooks, Leonardo da Vinci wrote of pareidolia as a device for painters:

“If you look at any walls spotted with various stains or with a mixture of different kinds of stones, if you are about to invent some scene you will be able to see in it a resemblance to various different landscapes adorned with mountains, rivers, rocks, trees, plains, wide valleys, and various groups of hills. You will also be able to see divers combats and figures in quick movement, and strange expressions of faces, and outlandish costumes, and an infinite number of things which you can then reduce into separate and well conceived forms.”

pareidolia (1)

 

both (quotation by Nassim Nicholas Taleb)

14 Thursday Aug 2014

Posted by is this anything in autism, quotation, twitter tweets

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

acceptance, autism, black swan, both, compassion, death, empathy, grace, Hannah, happiness, illusion, imbalance, letting go, loss, motherhood, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, play, quotation, randomness, surrender, transience, tweet, union, yin yang, zen

“Love without sacrifice is like theft.” —Nassim Nicholas Taleb100_1497

simple (a quote from Alan Watts)

30 Wednesday Jul 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

alan watts, grace, happiness, illusion, play, quotation, serenity, simplicity, transience, truth, wisdom, zen

“The meaning of life is just to be alive. It is so plain and so obvious and so simple. And yet, everybody rushes around in a great panic as if it were necessary to achieve something beyond themselves.”  ―Alan Watts

Take-time-to-smell-the-flower-resizecrop--

 

blind (an extended tweet)

17 Saturday May 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

apophenia, blindness, both, compassion, grace, illusion, kindness, metaphor, randomness, tweet, vision, zen

Clearly we’re all blind. We each “know” just one small part of the elephant. Thus, how absurd to be arguing with such fury when we really ought to be comparing notes.

 Image

mathematics (Nassim Nicholas Taleb)

06 Tuesday May 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

apophenia, illusion, math, meditation, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, play, quotation, randomness, zen

“Recall that mathematics is a tool to meditate, not compute.” –Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Image

 

obvious (Nassim Nicholas Taleb)

06 Tuesday May 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

apophenia, illusion, Nassim Nicholas Taleb, pareidolia, quotation, randomness, reason, zen

“It is so obvious that we know what to do yet do not carry the action because thinking can be largely ornamental.” –Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Image

caught (Ram Dass)

04 Sunday May 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

compassion, games, happiness, illusion, imbalance, paradox, power, quotation, ram dass, surrender, wroclaw, zen

“If everybody gets caught in your game, you lose. Do you hear that one? If you win, you lose.” –Ram Dass

Image

 

Image

a happy, half-learned lesson (a tweet)

15 Tuesday Apr 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

apophenia, balance, both, happiness, illusion, play, truth, yin yang, zen

The knowledge that the world is illusory has little to do with how much fun it is to play with.Image

let go (a quote from Joseph Campbell)

15 Tuesday Apr 2014

Posted by is this anything in quotation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

adventure, choice, illusion, joseph campbell, letting go, mystery, play, quotation, surrender, truth, zen

We must be willing to let go of the life we planned so as to have the life that is waiting for us. –Joseph Campbell

Image

Icari (thinking out loud)

20 Thursday Mar 2014

Posted by is this anything in Evolving ideas, journal entry, random thought

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

adventure, bliss, bruegel, freedom, grace, icarus, illusion, metaphor, paradox, play, surrender, thinking out loud, zen

Glancing up from armchair reverie, I watch two BASE-jumpers on a PBS documentary called “The Birdmen”. They leap from the fabulous cliff, wearing suits with stunted wings—not so much wings as webbing, as if their outflung arms and legs are tissued to their bodies–brightly flavored sails that billow as the young men fall. They look like neon kites, these men, and they fly seemingly free for a long while–relatively speaking–and then when the time is ripe they open parachutes and float the final yardage to the ground.

As the first one lands, the camera rushes in and asks how-do-you-feel. The jumper shouts terrific great whooohooooo. Then the other man returns to earth and the camera can only, mutely, watch as the flyers recombine—wide-eyed, whooping, babbling but articulate, reviewing every millimoment—each angle of the sun, each sudden rocky outcrop, each barely traversable river of wind, and it’s clear not just that they’re brothers now, at least for this moment, but that the two of them speak a language different from the rest of us–an idiom very complex, full of shortcuts and inside jokes, exotically precise in its vocabulary, references, metaphors, silences. We are, all of us—or nearly all of us–outsiders to their vision. They have no way, not really, to explain who they’ve become, who they’re becoming, who they’ve been all along—no way and maybe no need to explain such impossibles to the earthbound likes of us. Even when, later (as I half-hear them, from the kitchen now), they conjure similes (“free as an eagle”…) to express to the camera the feeling, the meaning of their adventure, comparisons don’t help; the abyss between us is unbridgeable. We can’t know what they know unless or until we do what they’ve done.

And this is an essence of zen, too, I think—if you meander far enough along the nowhere path, you start to learn and speak, however haltingly, a language no one else can know unless they’ve been here too. And it can leave you feeling alone, if you don’t feel a partner beside you on your adventure: someone in the same clownish, precarious costume, poised atop the same magnificent cliff, wishing you smooth sailing as you both leap—whooohooooo!–into the void of no-mind. It can feel lonely, plunging into that placeless place alone. But of course you have to not-mind feeling precisely thus, even as you also see–with your usual wry laugh at how (again!) you’ve had to re-recall it–that you’re not alone at all. We’re all flames in the fireplace, dancing like puppets up from behind a guileful log. We each seem singular, independent of each other, so that it’s only when we really look–beneath, behind, around, past, through–that we see how fused we are. We’re fingers of the same hand, leaves drifting downward from the same tall tree, offshoots from the same root, flames rising high and low from the same all-nurturing, all-consuming fire.

icarus2

not a good sign (tweet)

12 Wednesday Mar 2014

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

choice, habit, helplessness, illusion, imbalance, thinking out loud, twitter

Often I can’t fit a thought into 140 characters. Thing is, lately I need to remind myself that that’s not the thought’s fault.Image

All that mad charisma doesn’t hurt, either… (video link)

08 Saturday Mar 2014

Posted by is this anything in link

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

illusion, love, play, Russell Brand, simplicity, truth, zen

How funny to see how nervous people get when you’re simply being a person, telling the truth.

Russell Brand on MSNBC: http://youtu.be/ADJhErmJuoQ  via @YouTube

typo (diary excerpt)

07 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by is this anything in journal entry

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

death, fear, free-wheeling fifth-letter change, illusion, imbalance, metaphor, randomness, typo, zen

…  I’ve noticed that Tara [my friend; also, my beleaguered housekeeper] maintains a fifteen-minute window on either side of her arrival. Right now the time is 3:40. In five minutes I must begin to be on the lookout for her. And so it seems these days with death too—I feel so often lately the anxiety before the anxiety. How dare I say I live forever, when I’m so terrified of dying? I’m afraud …

Image

[Apologies to Tara for comparing her to death. (She is, in fact, the opposite.)]

lesson (a tweet)

16 Saturday Nov 2013

Posted by is this anything in twitter tweets

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

fun, happiness, illusion

My latest life lesson: The knowledge that the world is an illusion has nothing to do with how much fun it is to play with.     (July 2013)

full-moon-olympic-rings-london-bridge-2012

Recent Posts

  • Schrodinger’s cat (a poem)
  • impeachment
  • Excerpts (a poem, maybe?)
  • a trap I’m in
  • As a kid, I had a crush on Aesop (journal entry)
  • practice (a journal entry)
  • Abbreviated (a poem)

Tags

acceptance apophenia autism balance both choice comfort compassion freedom grace grief happiness illusion love memory metaphor paradox poem quotation randomness serendipity serenity surrender thinking out loud transience tweet writing zen

Top Posts & Pages

  • On days you can't remember (a poem)
    On days you can't remember (a poem)
  • Now (a poem)
    Now (a poem)
  • creativity (a quote from Albert Einstein
    creativity (a quote from Albert Einstein
  • luck (a quote from the Dalai Lama)
    luck (a quote from the Dalai Lama)
  • aperture (quote from Alan Watts)
    aperture (quote from Alan Watts)
  • The odd things we love, when we love (a poem)
    The odd things we love, when we love (a poem)
  • my latest notion (a poem)
    my latest notion (a poem)
  • too much happiness (a quote from Alice Munro)
    too much happiness (a quote from Alice Munro)
  • abashed (a diary entry)
    abashed (a diary entry)
  • two diary entries, 12 days apart
    two diary entries, 12 days apart

Archives

Categories

Recent Comments

Nathan AM Smith on Excerpts (a poem, maybe?)
Follow is this anything on WordPress.com

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 395 other subscribers

Blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • is this anything
    • Join 258 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • is this anything
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...