remember to remember me
I almost bought a banjo the other day. The last time I played an instrument was in middle school. I could never figure out how to use both of my hands to play the piano, but I was pretty good with one finger. It was always too hard thinking about what my left hand was supposed to do while my right hand was playing at the same time. Perhaps that's a minor obstacle for most, but I respect most musicians, largely because they overcame figuring out how to use both of their fucking hands at once. It seems that lately I've been thinking more than any normal person would be in a given second. I think that's a really sad excuse for a superpower. At the same time, none of my thoughts have been coming together. That's my weakness I suppose. It's all a bunch of loose ends. Or perhaps it's just one loose end with a bunch of loose ends trailing off. So a split end…hm. Matt posted something really depressing the other day. In the same, depressing perspective, we're all terribly helpless. From a contrasting perspective though, we're not terribly helpless. So I guess you can spin it a few different ways. For the past couple years I've been sending messages to people with my thoughts. It has a 30% success rate, but I really like the idea that someone would know what I'm thinking without me ever having to open my mouth. In reality though, I think my thoughts have just been bouncing off of myself and coming back to make me think about the same thing over and over again. Just like I've never been able to play the piano with both of my hands, I've never been able to figure out how to speak with my mouth and think with my brain at the same time. By the time I finally have something to say, the conversation has trailed off like my right hand on the piano.
2 comments:
Today in class we talked about what it meant to be a "complete human".
Daoists believe that the perfected person uses his mind like a mirror to reflect thoughts, respond to them, but not to store them. To take things as they come, to accept the inevitable.
This doesn't really make sense to me though, how can a person be complete if they don't take with them the things that come and go. Isn't life all about experiences? Don't our experiences mold us and shape us into the beings that we are? A person is continuously changing, evolving.
What DOES it mean to be complete? How do we know? How do we become?
I feel like only by living life these answers can come to us. Through living and experiencing,your "split ends" will come into contact with their endpoints, and the connections will be made.
When we were studying Mencius, we learned the Confucious viewpoint that everyone has the "sprouts" of virtue, and that we have to cultivate them to make them grow into completeness. I feel like this applies to all aspects of life. We need to constantly reflect and question and learn and experience. All of this will help us to grow and understand.
Your loose ends WILL tie together.
You WILL find your purpose.
you should've bought the banjo.
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