[Video: “Somebody That I Used to Know,” performed by Walk Off the Earth. Lyrics here. See the note about the video at the bottom of this post, too.]
From whiskey river (italicized portion):
What Narrative Is For
How fine the mind that can calculate
change and recognize destiny,as if luck had something to do
with knowing, as if the leasesigned with the eyes closed
meant happiness, or even timethat’s bearable, slow breaths exchanging
the currency that wanting spends,and how fine that sedatives
and jewels exist, those slanted elegies.So there are errands and hours
when you hear your own breath—or feel my breath coming from within you—
and register the haunt of cicadassummering under the porch. So there is time
spooking off into the wings.These are going to be big surgeries, bloody
gauzes of conditions, when lossmust be measured, and then
there are the outcomes, the callsthat must be made. Wouldn’t we all like to avoid
being the reason for anguish, to understandwhy it’s so easy to cut ourselves
on our own edges? Silent,the responders. They might
have the answers, but they’re nottelling, even when the vise grips
go for the nails. All that’s left is to knowwe will suffer through almost anything—
make sure to remember it well.
(Margot Schilpp [source])
…and:
Art gives us the knowledge that many have gone before, and had the same strange feelings and the same unanswerable questions, and that we are not alone in the art-endeavor, let alone life. It gives us the knowledge that people have always been stupid and violent and cruel, and compassionate and confused and curious and wondrous and astonished and tired. What it does not give us is answers. It gives us instead a picture. It does not ask that we analyze the picture, but that we stand before it and look, in the hope that looking might turn into gazing. For gazing will hold our attention for a very long time.
(Mary Ruefle [source])
…and:
The world is an illusion, but it is an illusion which we must take seriously, because it is real as far as it goes, and in those aspects of the reality which we are capable of apprehending. Our business is to wake up. We have to find ways in which to detect the whole of reality in the illusory parts which our self-centered consciousness permits us to see. We must not live thoughtlessly, taking our illusion for the complete reality, but at the same time we must not live too thoughtfully in the sense of trying to escape from the dream state. We must continually be on the watch for ways in which we may enlarge our consciousness, we must not attempt to live outside the world, which is given us, but we must somehow learn how to transform it and transfigure it. Too much “wisdom” is as bad as too little wisdom, and there must be no magic tricks. We must learn to come to reality without the enchanter’s wand and his book of the words. One must find a way of being in this world while not being of it. A way of living in time without being completely swallowed up in time.
(Aldous Huxley [source])