Have you ever noticed how some people just can't tolerate silence? They always have to have noise around them, whether it is the television or music on in the background, or they are actively talking to someone. It is almost like the silence unnerves them and weighs too heavily for them to be comfortable or something.
I love silence. When I am home alone, I rarely have music or the TV on. I love to just sit and focus on whatever it is that I'm doing while the silence just enfolds me like a blanket. It lets my mind clear out all of those random thoughts that we all get every day. It goes through them, sorting them out and throwing the irrelevant ones out while filing the good ones away for deeper thought. Sometimes I make plans for the future in my head, things I want to do around the house or for my business, and with the silence around me I can just drift from idea to idea without my train of thought getting interrupted.
Sure, I like to watch movies, and am a Music Based Lifeform, but when I am home alone and everything is silent around me except for the normal house noises of HVAC, the ice in the icemaker dropping, and the jingling of the bells on the cats' collars, I just feel so very content.
I'm not sure if that makes me strange or not. But really, it is who I am, and I'm okay with that.
Up until today I had two blogs. The first one started as a political and social commentary blog, then evolved into just a general blog. The second...this one...began as a Health at Every Size focused blog. I originally intended to keep those two parts of my life apart. Lately I have come to realize that I'm not compartmentalized as a person, so I don't want the parts of my life kept in different boxes. I have now combined the two blogs. So hello, World...this is my life. :)
Sunday, February 12, 2017
Tuesday, February 7, 2017
LiveBlog: Reading "The Fountainhead" by Ayn Rand
These are notes from my second session of reading The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. It is slow going as I am taking notes, and, quite frankly, haven't been in the right mindset to read this particular book for the past few days. But onward we go!
Peter Keating - Perfect in every way, at least outwardly. Inside he is unsure. Unsure of himself, unsure of his skills or talents, and unsure of his place in life. There are so many who suffer these same insecurities without the advantages he has. I'm not sure yet if I should feel pity for him or empathy. His mother is passive-aggressive and manipulative. His friends don't seem to really be friends because his facade, his public face, is too impenetrable. I'm curious to see where things go and what he ends up representing.
Page 38
New word: Pilaster
Definitions: The pilaster is an architectural element in classical architecture used to give the appearance of a supporting column and to articulate an extent of wall, with only an ornamental function. It consists of a flat surface raised from the main wall surface, usually treated as though it were a column, with a capital at the top, plinth (base) at the bottom, and the various other elements. - Wikipedia
Page 45
"The Columbian Exposition of Chicago opened in the year 1893.
The Rome of two thousand years ago rose on the shores of Lake Michigan, a Rome improved by pieces of France, Spain, Athens, and every style that followed it. It was a "Dream City" of columns, triumphal arches, blue lagoons, crystal fountains and popcorn. Its architects competed on who could steal best, from the oldest source, and from the most sources at once. It spread before the eyes of a new country every structural crime ever committed in all the old ones. It was white as a plague and it spread as such."
Rand demonstrates a serious contempt of history and tradition with this passage. It almost seems as though she has gone past the point of "we shouldn't be slaves to tradition" and into a realm where nothing traditional holds any value, it just holds mankind back from necessary growth.
That seems to be a very extreme line of thought to me. I agree that traditions need to be re-assessed on a regular basis to determine whether they are still applicable to our lives, still relevant in some way. But I am definitely not in the camp that would throw the baby out with the bath water.
Traditions can be updated, changed, or even left behind if that is needed for growth. That said, it should never be done lightly or summarily. Maintaining a connection with the past is equally important as laying a path toward the future.
That's as far as I've gotten right now. More to come as I continue reading!
Peter Keating - Perfect in every way, at least outwardly. Inside he is unsure. Unsure of himself, unsure of his skills or talents, and unsure of his place in life. There are so many who suffer these same insecurities without the advantages he has. I'm not sure yet if I should feel pity for him or empathy. His mother is passive-aggressive and manipulative. His friends don't seem to really be friends because his facade, his public face, is too impenetrable. I'm curious to see where things go and what he ends up representing.
Page 38
New word: Pilaster
Definitions: The pilaster is an architectural element in classical architecture used to give the appearance of a supporting column and to articulate an extent of wall, with only an ornamental function. It consists of a flat surface raised from the main wall surface, usually treated as though it were a column, with a capital at the top, plinth (base) at the bottom, and the various other elements. - Wikipedia
Page 45
"The Columbian Exposition of Chicago opened in the year 1893.
The Rome of two thousand years ago rose on the shores of Lake Michigan, a Rome improved by pieces of France, Spain, Athens, and every style that followed it. It was a "Dream City" of columns, triumphal arches, blue lagoons, crystal fountains and popcorn. Its architects competed on who could steal best, from the oldest source, and from the most sources at once. It spread before the eyes of a new country every structural crime ever committed in all the old ones. It was white as a plague and it spread as such."
Rand demonstrates a serious contempt of history and tradition with this passage. It almost seems as though she has gone past the point of "we shouldn't be slaves to tradition" and into a realm where nothing traditional holds any value, it just holds mankind back from necessary growth.
That seems to be a very extreme line of thought to me. I agree that traditions need to be re-assessed on a regular basis to determine whether they are still applicable to our lives, still relevant in some way. But I am definitely not in the camp that would throw the baby out with the bath water.
Traditions can be updated, changed, or even left behind if that is needed for growth. That said, it should never be done lightly or summarily. Maintaining a connection with the past is equally important as laying a path toward the future.
That's as far as I've gotten right now. More to come as I continue reading!
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