So you have wandered into the realm of Alan Watts. Good for you.“If the universe is meaningless, so is the statement that it is so… The meaning and purpose of dancing is the dance."
~ Alan Watts
So you have wandered into the realm of Alan Watts. Good for you.“If the universe is meaningless, so is the statement that it is so… The meaning and purpose of dancing is the dance."
~ Alan Watts
So you have wandered into the realm of Alan Watts. Good for you.
Dig a hole in your back yard while it is raining. Sit in the hole until the water climbs up around your ankles. Pour cold mud down hour shirt collar. Sit there for forty-eight hours, and, so there is no danger of your dozing off, imagine that a guy is sneaking around waiting for a chance to club you on the head or set your house on fire.
Get out of the hole, fill a suitcase full of rocks, pick it up, put a shotgun in your other hand, and walk on the muddiest road you can find. Fall flat on your face every few minutes as you imagine big meteors streaking down to sock you.
After ten or twelve miles (remember --- you are still carrying the shotgun and suitcase) start sneaking through the wet brush. Imagine that somebody has booby-trapped your route with rattlesnakes which will bite you if you step on them. Give some friend a rifle and have him blast in your direction once in a while.
Snoop around until you find a bull. Try to figure out a way to sneak around him without letting him see you. When he does see you, run like hell all the way back to your hole in the back yard, drop the suitcase and shotgun, and get in.
If you repeat this performance every three days for several months you may begin to understand why an infantryman sometimes gets out of breath. But you still won't understand how he feels when things get tough.
No normal man who has smelled and associated with death ever wants to see any more of it. In fact, the only men who are even going to want to bloody noses in a fist fight after this war will be the ones who want people to think they were tough combat men, when they weren't. The surest way to become a pacifist is to join the infantry.
I'm going to forward this to my wife, who survived many a moment of depression by having cats sit on her.Quoted from - Lost Cat: A True Story of Love, Desperation, and GPS Technology
Tibia and Fibula meowed happily when I arrived. They were undaunted by my ensuing stupor. In fact they were delighted; suddenly I had become a human who didn’t shout into a small rectangle of lights and plastic in her hand, peer at a computer, or get up and disappear from the vicinity, only to reappear through the front door hours later. Instead, I was completely available to them at all times. Amazed by their good luck, they took full feline advantage. They asked for ear scratches and chin rubs. They rubbed their whiskers along my face. They purred in response to my slurred, affectionate baby talk. But mostly they just settled in and went to sleep. Fibby snored into my neck. Tibby snored on the rug nearby. Meanwhile I lay awake, circling the deep dark hole of depression.
Without my cats, I would have fallen right in.
Whereas Mark Vonnegut did it in only a dozen words:It is said that someone at a party once asked the famous philosopher Ly Tin Wheedle 'Why are you here?' and the reply took three years.
("The Light Fantastic", Sir Terry Pratchett)
The best account of deference to royalty that I have ever read: a story from Toby Faber's Violin Dreams, about Johann Salomon, who was hired by none other than King George III to teach the king how to play the violin:
When the king asked his teacher how he was doing, Salomon is said to have replied, "There are three levels of skill in violin playing: an inability to play, the ability to play badly, and the ability to play well. Your Majesty, I am pleased to say, has already reached the second level."