Category Archives: discovery

Essays In Love quotes

Reading Alain de Botton’s book(his first!), Essays In Love. It’s a delightful read with fun story and some decent thoughts on love that feel like he’s discovering them as he’s writing them down, which allows me to take them in easier even if I don’t fully agree. However I sounded in my last post, I haven’t given up on love and its forms. Here are a some from the first half of the book:

“We fall in love in love hoping we won’t find in another what we know is in ourselves, all the cowardice, weakness, laziness, dishonesty, compromise, and stupidity. We throw a cordon of love around the chosen one and decide that everything within it will somehow be free of our faults. We locate inside another persona perfection that eludes us within ourselves, and through our union with the beloved, hope to maintain (against the evidence of all self-knowledge) a precarious faith in our species.”

“The telephone becomes an instrument of torture in the demonic hands of a beloved who doesn’t ring.”

“It is one of the ironies of love that it is easiest confidently to seduce those whom we are least attracted. My feelings for Chloe meant I lost any belief in my own worthiness.”

“On his first date with Chloe: Silence was damning. A silence with an unattractive person implies they are the boring one. a silence with an attractive one immediately renders it certain you are the tedious party.”

“I wasn’t thinking anything cruel while I ran my hands and lips across Chloe’s body, it was simply that Chloe would probably have been disturbed by news that I was thinking at all. Because thought implies judgement, and because we are all paranoid enough to take judgement to be negative, it is constitutionally suspect in the bedroom. Hence the sighing that drowns the sounds of lovers’ thoughts, sighing that confirmsL I am too passionate to be thinking. I kiss, and therefore I do not think – such is the official myth under which lovemaking takes place, the bedroom a unique space in which partners tacitly agree not to remind one another of the awe-inspiring wonder of their nudity.”

“It can seem as though we’ve met them somewhere before, in a previous life, perhaps, or in our dreams.”

“Therefore, in the mature account of love, we should never fall at first glance. We should reserve our leap until we have completed a clear-eyed investigation of the depths and nature of the waters. Only after we have undertaken a thorough exchange of opinions on parenting, politics, art, science, and appropriate snacks for the kitchen should two people ever decide they are ready to love each other. In the mature account of love, it is only when we truly know our partners that love deserves the chance to grow. And yet in the perverse reality of love (love that is born precisely before we know) increased knowledge may be as much a hurdle as an inducement – for it may bring Utopia into dangerous conflict with reality.” 

“It was perhaps a pedantic matter over which to come to such a decision, but shoes are supreme symbols of aesthetic, and hence by extension psychological, compatibility.”

 

All You Need Is Loves

I am reading Roman Krznaric’s book, WONDERBOX, and this is basically what he says in his chapter on love. He goes on about how the Greeks were so much better at loving than we are today, but I think they were just better at labelling. I am a lover. And this is what I mean by it. These loves are alive and we know them. And just as if you’d only eat one thing you’d be deprived of other essential nutrients it’s good to not be too heavily in love with just one type of loving. Broaden your palette. See where you’re deficient. And, for the love of God, please don’t burden any one person by expecting them to fulfill all your love needs!!!

Disorder

A person with an ADHD nervous system has never been able to use the idea of importance or rewards to start and do a task. They know what’s important, they like rewards, and they don’t like punishment. But for them, the things that motivate the rest of the world are merely nags.

This is pulled from a great article that has reminded me of many of the problems much of the world has with me and that, in turn, I sometimes have with myself.

Anybody who knows me well has heard me talk about “getting in the zone.” It is such great feeling and when I find it it is hard to stop me, in fact I sometimes get pissed when someone tries. I have also learned how to play by the rules of the rest of the world, but I eventually feel like I will explode and I have felt like I have to do something extreme to balance things for me. I have also learned some ways to deal with it(without medication), but a busy life doesn’t always allow for it. Although, I think that is part of the reason I need to dance. Especially the more risky kind. Also why I love parkour and survival situations and multi-layered conversations. But my writing and music making also help. The focus I find in those activities soothes my brain and definitely give me a sense of worth.

Anyway, read the article. There is a really beautiful thing it tells: don’t make us into neurotypicals, our rules are different that we have to discover. We are not sick and there is nothing wrong with us because we can’t get motivated the same way or don’t think like most of the world.

Also, I always thought it was the Asian in me, but maybe my sleep patterns come from this, too.

Prague

Now in Prague, or Praha rather. I am 1/4 Czech. I probably have relatives here. I do really like this city. It is very green and the architecture feels different than most other European cities I’ve been to so far, especially with most of the buildings painted in pastels. Here are a few photos coming in and on my way to eat some goulash…

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