Sunday, June 21, 2009


A 33-year-old Egyptian man, who currently sleeps in the parks of Milan, eats in charity kitches, and occasionally washes dishes for restaurants whenever he needs some cash testifies to the happiness of his life:

After the War of 1967 I decided to leave Egypt and start hitchhiking toward Europe. Ever since I have been living with my mind concentrated within myself. It has not been just a trip, it has been a search for identity. Every man has something to discover within himself. The people in my town were sure I was crazy when I decided to start walking to Europe. But the best thing in life is to know oneself. . . My idea from 1967on has remained the same: to find myself. I had to struggle against many things. I passed through Lebanon and its war, through Syria, Jordan, Turkey, Yugoslavia, before getting here. I had to confront all sorts of natural disasters; I slept in ditches near the road in thunderstorms, I was involved in accidents, I have seen friends die next to me, but my concentration has never flagged. . . It has been an adventure that so far has lasted twenty years, but it will keep going on for the rest of my life. . .

Through these experiences I have come to see tha the world is not worth much. The only thing that counts for me no, first and last, is God. I am most concentrated when I pray with my prayer beads. Then I am able to put my feelings to sleep, to calm myself and avoid becoming crazy. I believe that destiny rules life, and it makes no sense to struggle too hard . . . During my journey I have seen hunger, war, death, and poverty. Now through prayer I have begun to hear myself, I have returned toward my center, I have achieved concentration and I have understood that the world has no value. Man was born to be tested on this earth. Cars, television sets, clothes are secondary. The main thing is that we were born to praise the Lord. Everyone has his own fate, and we should be like the lion in the proverb. The lion, when he runs after a pack of gazelles, can only catch them one at a time. I try to be like that, and not like Westerners who go crazy working even though they cannot eat more than their daily bread. . . If I am to live twenty more years, I will try to live enjoying each moment, instead of killing myself to get more. . . If I am to live like a free man who does not depend on anyone, I can afford to go slowly; if I don't earn anything today, it does not matter. It means that this happens to be my fate. Next day I may earn 100 million -- or get a terminal illness. Like Jesus Christ said, What does it benefit to man if he gains the entire world, but loses himself? I have tried first to conquer myself; I don't care if I lose the world.

I set out on this journey, like a baby bird hatching from its egg; ever since I have been walking in freedom. Every man should get to know himself and experience life in all its forms. I could have gone on sleeping soundly in my bed, and found work in my town, because a job was ready for me, but I decided to sleep with the poor, because one must suffer to become a man. One does not get to be a man by getting married, by having sex: to be a man means to be responsible, to know when it is time to speak, to know what has to be said, to know when one must stay silent.



-from Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi


. . . which is an excellent book by the way. I would highly recommend it. Or at least go wach Csikszentmihalyi's TED talk.

It's true, one does not become a man (or a woman, for that matter, but I feel this is more of an issue in our culture with men) by having sex. Anyone can have sex, any animal can have sex. We are biologically programmed to have and enjoy sex. What is hard, what makes you a mature adult is managing your sexual power in a responsible way, realizing the effect of sexual power and using it wisely and maturely.

Friday, June 12, 2009

Life’s short and we never have enough time for the hearts of those who travel the way with us. O, be swift to love! Make haste to be kind.” -Henri Frederic Amiel

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

we have so much

and yet we put so little of it to use.

"No one has the answers.
Everyone has the responsibility."

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

fell in love with a poem

The Four-Moon Planet

I have envied the four-moon planet.
-
from The Notebooks of Robert Frost

Maybe he was thinking of the song
"What a Little Moonlight Can Do?"
and became curious about
what a lot of moonlight might be capable of.


But wouldn't this be too much of a good thing?
and what if you couldn't tell them apart
and they always rose together
like pale quadruplets entering a living room?


Yes, there would be enough light
to read a book or write a letter at midnight,
and if you drank enough tequilia
you might see eight of them roving brightly above.


But think of the two lovers on a beach,
his arm around her bare shoulder,
thrilled at how close they were feeling tonight,
while he gazed at one moon and she another.



[by Billy Colins, from his new collection Ballistics]

Monday, June 1, 2009

things i like. . .

-being alone
-being alone
-being alone
-being alone
-being alone
-being alone
-being alone and watching the o.c.
-being alone and watching gossip girl
-being alone and reading
-being alone and bicycling
-being alone and writing poetry


i like myself more when i'm alone.

things i don't like doing alone:

-drinking
-smoking cigarettes
-doing yoga


things i like doing with anna:
-being silly
-watching alias/arrested development/gossip girl
-talking
-talking about infomania

things i like doing with nicole:
-cooking
-playing scrabble
-talking
-driving

things i like doing with anna millard:
-getting coffee
-gossiping
-talking and walking and smoking cigarettes
-kissing