7/17/13

Maktoub (By Paolo Coelho)



Maktoub is an Arabic work meaning ‘Written’. This book is a collection of short anecdotes and quotes that have been collected over a long period by the author. A bit loose, and with varying depth, the book is a stimulating and easy read.




From the book:


The Buddha was asked by a man in the morning: “Does god exist?” ; He replied “God Exists”. After lunch, a second man asked :”Does God exist?” ; The Buddha replied : “No.. He doesn’t exist.” Later in the afternoon, a third man asked the same question: “Does God Exist?”, and the Buddha said : “that is up to you to decide”. At that point one of his students asked: “Master – how can you answer the same question in three different ways?” and the enlightened one said : “Because these are three different people, and each has his own way to be closer to god.”

The Young Bonaparte was shaking like a leaf during the Toulon siege. A soldier saw him and mocked him : “Look at this one – he is very frightened” he shouted. Bonaparte replied : “That is true, but I am fully present in the battle. If any of you felt half the fear that I feel, he would run away instantly”

It is Friday. You come home, and read papers that you missed during the week. Turn on the TV with no volume, and listen to music as you jump from one channel to another. Your wife looks after the kids, sacrificing the best years of her youth without knowing why.. and you think : “Well, this is life” – No , Life is not like that. Life is enthusiasm. Remember where you lost yours.

“Things have energy. When they’re not used, they become like stagnant water. If you hang on to what is old and unneeded, what is new won’t have room.”

“There are two gods : The one that crushes under the weight of our mistakes, and the one that frees us with his love.”

“Faith is pure and transparent and can’t be vague”
A wise man was walking in a meadow covered with snow, and he saw a woman crying. “Why the tears?” he asked. She said “Because I remember the past, and the days of youth and beauty. God has been cruel to me as he gave me a memory to remember and cry for the spring of my life.” The wise man was then attentively watching the meadow, gazing at it with all his attention focusing on a specific spot, and the woman asked : “What are you staring at?” , and the wise man replied : “The place of the roses .. God has graciously given me the gift of memory so that in the coldest days of the winter I will be able to remember spring and smile”.

A swan, and in the face of a cruel cold winter, tears its own flesh and feeds its young ones. She survives for a few days, and finally dies. One of the chicks says to his brother: “This is better – I was annoyed by having to eat the same food every day”

“Abraham welcomed the visitors, and god was pleased with him. Elias didn’t like strangers, and god was pleased with him. David was proud, and god was pleased with him. John the Baptist went to the desert, and god was pleased with him. Jona went to Nineveh, and god was pleased with him.”

“Never fear that people might treat you as insane. Defy logic and the serious attitude that you’ve learned.”


“If your heart had spiritual treasures, use them instantly, or they will be ruined” 

7/8/13

The Elegance of the hedgehog - By Muriel Barbury


This book tells the story of a 'hidden' concierge, and an extremely smart young girl, as they go on discovering in the worlds of art, life, and meaning. It is definitely a thoughtful book, and extremely rich in ideas and thoughts. The form could have been much better, especially with the overuse of the first person speech/memoirs from both the characters, and the lack of 'incidents', which somehow reduces the story to a - roughly - a double commentary.. Even the death finale/overall ending, lacked a spark and inspiration.

There were surely many instances of elegance and beauty in the movie, but the issue is that many of them were too 'fleeting' (as one of the protagonists clarifies many times), that they lost some of their power and were weakened. This could be attributed to the lack of strong foundations (artistic and logical and scientific)

Overall, many of the deep statements were very interesting and thought provoking, and the book is a very stimulating read.



Some Clippings and Quotes:


I’m referring to the beauty that is there in the world, things that, being part of the movement of life, elevate us. The Journal of the Movement of the World will be devoted therefore to the movement of people, bodies, or even—if there’s really nothing to say—things, and to finding whatever is beautiful enough to give life meaning. Grace, beauty, harmony, intensity.
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The only purpose of cats is that they constitute mobile decorative objects, a concept which I find intellectually interesting, but unfortunately our cats have such drooping bellies that this does not apply to them.
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Apparently this combination of ability and blindness is a symptom exclusive to the autodidact. Deprived of the steady guiding hand that any good education provides, the autodidact possesses nonetheless the gift of freedom and conciseness of thought, where official discourse would put up barriers and prohibit adventure.
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He understands how the human species, given only to survival, slowly matured and arrived one fine day at an intuition of pleasure, the vanity of all the artificial appetites that divert one from one’s initial aspiration toward the virtues of simple and sublime things, the pointlessness of discourse, the slow and terrible degradation of multiple worlds from which no one can escape and, in spite of all that, the wonderful sweetness of the senses when they conspire to teach mankind pleasure and the terrifying beauty of Art.
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All of phenomenology is founded on this certainty: our reflective consciousness, the sign of our ontological dignity, is the only entity we have that is worth studying, for it saves us from biological determinism.
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For years my inevitable conclusion has been that the films of the seventh art are beautiful, powerful and soporific, and that blockbuster movies are pointless, very moving, and immensely satisfying.
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In our world, that’s the way you live your grown-up life: you must constantly rebuild your identity as an adult, the way it’s been put together it is wobbly, ephemeral, and fragile, it cloaks despair and, when you’re alone in front of the mirror, it tells you the lies you need to believe.
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SETSUKO True novelty is that which does not grow old, despite the passage of time. The camel ia against the moss of the temple, the violet hues of the Kyoto mountains, a blue porcelain cup—this sudden flowering of pure beauty at the heart of ephemeral passion: is this not something we al aspire to? And something that, in our Western civilization, we do not know how to attain?
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Object lesson: in the world, everything is compensation. When you can’t go as fast, you push harder.
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I find this a fascinating phenomenon: the ability we have to manipulate ourselves so that the foundation of our beliefs is never shaken.
To the rich, therefore, fal s the burden of Beauty. And if they cannot assume it, then they deserve to die.
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Because art is life, playing to other rhythms.
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Kakuro was talking about birch trees and, forgetting all those psychoanalysts and intelligent people who don’t know what to do with their intelligence, I suddenly felt my spirit expand, for I was capable of grasping the utter beauty of the trees.
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Children help us to defer the painful task of confronting ourselves, and grandchildren take over from them. Television distracts us from the onerous necessity of finding projects to construct in the vacuity of our frivolous lives: by beguiling our eyes, television releases our mind from the great work of making meaning. Final y, God appeases our animal fears and the unbearable prospect that someday al our pleasures wil cease.
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If you imagine that getting high at a party and sleeping around is going to propel you into a state of full adulthood, that’s like thinking that dressing up as an Indian is going to make you an Indian.
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But those who seek eternity find solitude.
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People are so arrogant, thinking they can coerce nature, escape their destiny of little biological things . . . and yet they remain so blind to the cruelty or violence of their own way of living, loving, reproducing and making war on their fellow human beings . . .
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I have always been fascinated by the abnegation with which we human beings are capable of devoting a great deal of energy to the quest for nothing and to the rehashing of useless and absurd ideas.
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Truth loves nothing better than simplicity of truth: that
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The eye recognizes a shared form to which both belong, and that is Beauty.
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maybe the greatest anger and frustration come not from unemployment or poverty or the lack of a future but from the feeling that you have no culture, because you’ve been torn between cultures, between incompatible symbols. How can you exist if you don’t know where you are?
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I have said it al , told her everything: Lisette, my mother, the rain, beauty profaned, and, at the end of it al , the iron hand of destiny giving still born infants to mothers who die from wanting to be reborn.
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ten years of a lifetime have crystallized in Leo, and I take the measure of how the ridiculous, superfluous cats who wander through our lives with all the placidity and indifference of an imbecile are in fact the guardians of life’s good and joyful moments, and of its happy web, even beneath the canopy of misfortune.
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It’s as if those strains of music created a sort of interlude in time, something suspended, an elsewhere that had come to us, an always within never. Yes, that’s it, an always within never.
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7/7/13

الهويّة







وبدقّة أكثر ... الهويّة هي ما يعبر من خلالنا (بإرادتنا أو بدونها) إلى الأجيال التي تلحقنا ... جميلة ثنائيّة الإرادة (الفعل) والميراث في صياغة الهويّة