Friday, December 16, 2016

Of Mentors and Movements

I've been thinking about the actions I am taking and whether they can fit into a bigger movement.

John Michael Greer's latest piece [update site was taken down, here is a copy.] at the Archdruid Report is on the failure of the Peak Oil movement (maybe one could say the collapse of the collapse movement).

JMG is great about answering his commentators, so I asked
 Do you think there is any hope for a de-industrialization/retrotopian movement framed around quality of life issues? 
So much of modern life is ugly, noisy, and boring. Spaces can be made that are the opposite of all of those things and then be used by the home economy as a way to pay for the space and it's joy. 
Or do you think as long as there is a great fear of some competitor taking their status, most people really can't see that truth (after all, reading Walden shows that people have had the opportunity all along, eh?)

To which JMG replied
it would have to be handled very skillfully, to keep from going the way of the voluntary simplicity movement, and being turned into a sales pitch for "simple" products. It might well be worth trying, though
Then by coincidence I stumbled across Vinay Gupat's  fictional piece The Unplugged.  It's an excellent read.

So the real question is whether I am ready to stop being just an individual and be part of a movement?  Or is more correct to ask if I need to pick up the ideas of my mentors and put in the work to make them movements?

If the answer is yes in either case, then the best place to start is in making Norman weird, and, of course, in corrupting the youth.

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

My Translation of the Daodejing

I am working on a translation of the Daodejing.  It is a side-project, and so no promises as to when it will be done.  Also, at least for the first wave, I am selecting my favorite passages to work on.

1
2
3
4
16
23
46
48
63

Daodejing 4

Dao is empty
Its use never exhausted

It is an abyss
From which 10,000 things spring

It blunts sharp edges
unties knots,
and softens bright glares

Becoming one with the dust,
It is an endless pool

I do not know whose child it is.
Its workings are prior to the first Ancestor.

Daodejing 3

3
When "superior people" are not glorified
People are not disappointed
When rare objects are not treasured
People do not steal
When what people desire is not shown off
People's hearts are not confused

Therefore the sage rules by
Emptying hearts and filling bellies,
Weakening willfullness and strengthening bones,
Constantly directing people to be knowledgeless
and desireless,

Instructing the "knowledgeable" to not dare too much,
And, in contrast, practicing wei wu wei
so all things are duly regulated.

Daodejing 2

2
Everyone under heaven recognizes beauty as beauty
and so ugliness exists.
All recognize good, and so bad exists.

Is and isn't grow out of each other
Hard and easy complete each other
Long and short test each other
High and low are interdependent
Sound and voice harmonize
Beginning and end make each other possible

Therefore the Sage
Practices wu wei,
Carries on wordless teaching,
Creates 10,000 things without instruction,
Rears them, but does not make claims,
Influences, but does not oppress them,
Accomplishes, but does not take credit
So accomplishment endures.

Daodejing 1

1
Dao called Dao is not the eternal Dao

Names that can be named are not eternal names.

Nameless: the origin of heaven and earth
Naming: the mother of 10,000 things

Truly, "rid of desire, one can perceive
the Wondrous."
With desire, one can perceive only outcomes.

These have the same source, but different names.
This source we call Mystery
Or more mysterious than any mystery.

The gateway to all wonder.

Friday, September 9, 2016

My Interests

Health
    Nutrition
        CRON
        Protein-Cycle Diet
    Exercise
        Calisthenics/Bio-mechanics
        Hypertrophy
Cooking
Vegetable Gardening
Meditation
Daoism
    Chinese Characters
Shakespeare
    Elizabethian England
Thoreau
Nietzsche
Whitman
I guess the 19th century (based on the last 3 authors)
Languages
    Esperanto
    Spanish
    I used to crave others, but realized only have so much life.

I once had a really deep interest in time management.  Here are some things I have written on the subject that you might find helpful:

First, Use a Timer to Get More out of Your Time
Beat Procrastination by . . .  Starting
Procrastination Chronicles #3: Dealing with a Bunch of Crap
Productivity to Leave Productivity

Things I'm not interested in:

Whether a presidential candidate is physically healthy.  (didn't just come up in 2016)
What the stock market did today.
What you say you would have done in a situation you weren't in.
Whether you or anyone went to Harvard.
Who gets the inheritance.

Monday, June 27, 2016

Classics Want to Be Free (and Read)

Lip service is paid to the saying "the best things in life are free."  It happens to be true, especially with literature; a great deal of the best things ever written are in the public domain.

Here's some classics that I can personally vouch for being worth reading over and over:

Pride and Prejudice
Walden
Thus Spoke Zarathustra
Siddhartha
Romeo and Juliet
Hamlet
King Lear
MacBeth
Leaves of Grass

Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Eyes Wide Shut

Since showing 2001 to my film as literature class, I've been really into Stanley Kubrick movies, watching and reading about  a Clockwork Orange, Doctor Strangelove, and Eyes Wide Shut.

On my second viewing of EWS, after doing some reading, I was starting to notice details that were leading to a reading of the movie that is really close to this article that I read shortly after that second viewing.  It is really well written and saves me the trouble of having to write an inferior piece on the same subject.

So I'll just say I independently verify that the movie can be read as a statement about the nature of money and how our society tries to turn everything into a commodity.