13 November 2025

The Book I'm Not Reading

                                     


The book I'm not reading has a life jacket enclosed

 The book I'm not reading is a friend of mine

 God knows we need those
                                                                                Patty Larkin


I think often enough about W.G. Sebald’s eponymous novel, AusterlitzIt is a story that is concerned with the concept of memory as a foundation of identity. As a four-year-old child, Jacob Austerlitz, the novel’s narrator, had been sent on the Kindertransport from Prague to London and then shipped to Wales where he was given a new name, Dafyyd Elias, a new set of parents and a wholly new identity that erased the one that he had previously enjoyed. However, Jacob Austerlitz did not come to learn of his history or his real name until he became a teen-ager ready to graduate high school. The experience of his exile, though, had left him traumatized. He says, “I realized . . . how little practice I have in using my memory and conversely how hard I must always have tried to recollect as little as possible, avoiding everything which related in any way to my unknown past.” In his early life he knew nothing about World War II, the Nazi persecutions, the concentration camps in which both of his parents died, or the fact of his exile; it was not until he visited the Ghetto Museum in Terezin that he heard any suggestion “of the persecution which my avoidance system had kept from me for so long, and which now in this place surrounded me on all sides.” In response to this sudden awareness and attempting to learn his history, Austerlitz searches out his old Nanny, Vera, who had cared for him before his forced exile. During the conversations with Vera she remembers for him a question that once as a four-year-old, he had asked her. “Vera,” he had wondered to her, “when the snow covers the ground how do the squirrels know where to find what they have buried.” It is a perceptive question for a four-year-old to ask, I think, but Vera doesn’t in the present relate to him how she had answered, or at least, Austerlitz doesn’t narrate the response she offered him. But the adult Austerlitz in the present wonders, “How indeed do the squirrels know, what do we know ourselves, how do we remember, and what it is we find in the end.” I consider that what we know about ourselves is based on the stories we tell, but Austerlitz’s repression of memory had suppressed his stories. I guess ultimately I do not know what we find finally in our memory (a narrator in Jose Saramajo’s novel The Year of the Death of Ricardo Reis asks “What will you be when you discover it is night and you find yourself at the end of the road?”), but for now I might answer Austerlitz in this manner: we remember when we tell the story and then we are the story we tell. Austerlitz had no memory until he narrated it. And perhaps the pop in any story lies first in its recall and then in the editing that over the years has revised it, in that exercise of memory that entangles the past and present. And where does the writing physically begin?

One place where I can discover what I have buried is in my journals. It is in those volumes that many of my stories begin. In the archives at the University of Wisconsin-Stout where I had taught for twenty-eight years, I have placed almost 50 years of day books and reading/study journals. Some of the volumes go back to my early 20s when I first thought to keep a journal. "What are you doing now?” Ralph Waldo Emerson had asked Henry David Thoreau. “Do you keep a journal?” On the 22 October 1837, when he was only twenty years old, Thoreau entered this in his journal: “So I make my First entry to-day” Almost two centuries later, on my bookshelf reside two large compact volumes of Thoreau’s journals that exist in forty-seven volumes that had run to over two million words and spanned twenty-four years and twelve days in length! My original entry was not so momentous though perhaps equally inspired, and I have long forgotten what I had then entered first in a journal. It is buried somewhere under the snows. But even before I became an official scholar—by which, of course, I mean reading and writing academic tomes and publishing articles in scholarly journals (where the matter was often filled with unpopped, unscooped facts), I had begun to keep day/reading journals that accompanied me everywhere I journeyed and into which I recorded my progress through any number of days, books, relationships, events and ideas: it was in the journals that I found what became the genesis of stories; some of those journal entries still surprise and delight me, but so many are buried under the snow in the archives. The journals offered me the raw material for what I might have hoped would become popped and scooped stories. Some of those journal entries even might have had pop and scoop! Over the years, I have entered these primary narratives into a variety of journal types: into reporter-like stenographic pads, and soft-covered, bright-colored school notebooks, or sometimes into tiny, clothbound, and lined books. For several years, I chose to make my entries into large, heavy and oversized blue accounting volumes all of which I kept close to hand in a variety of suitably sized Man bags. I was younger then and I did not travel light. Over the past several decades I have taken to make my entries into black moleskin books on pages graph-style-lined, a design I observed in one of my stays in Paris. On my shelves two still unwrapped volumes awaiting stories At some point I began writing in the journals with fountain pens that I filled with a variety of color inks though today I write solely in empyrean blue and jet black. 

 I have made my partner promise that when I die—as I must—she should deliver into the archives whatever volumes that I have continued to fill over the years since that first deposit. I do intend to maintain a journal for as long as I fam alive and have the capacity to do so. But I am a careless scholar and I often forget or am too lethargic to enter some of what I might consider my more profound thoughts; sometimes they then become lost until in some context they become found and then perhaps it is a new thought and idea. In the journals there does not exist an organizing principle in which the notes have been entered. When I am reading a book—but only sometimes—I set aside time to transfer into my journal under linings and annotations that I had added to the book’s margins, and at times I might even have added into the journal entry a comment or six inspired by the text. In the journal I might next directly enter a very personal description and comment that concerned events and thoughts and dreams deriving from and addressing to my personal life and times. This might be followed by an entry from my reading of some periodical, maybe The New York Review of BooksThe London Review of Books, or  less frequently these days The New York Times. The latter too often always leads, however, to an angry screed—mostly a complaint—and I have restricted my reading in the newspaper to the arts and leisure section and the obituaries. If I’m not there I know I’m onto dead. Thoreau had written long ago that to read the newspaper daily is like a dog returning to its vomit, and cautioned not to read the newspapers! There is, as I have said, no organizational principle to the journal entries. How I would find something that I might want in them at some later time escapes me, and so I occasionally read in whatever journals are at hand looking in the snows for some food I have left. As for the tomes in the archives, they are unavailable for such browsing, though I believe, there is much excellent voice in those little organs, yet now I cannot make them speak. Later, to someone, they will have to speak for themselves. As I have said, I am a careless scholar.

 Why do I keep them, the journals I mean? How do I even make the present ones speak given the disarray of the entries; how can I give some voice to past volumes entombed now in the archives? Tucked away in several boxes in the archives at the University and inaccessible until 2035 no one, in fact, will be able to read the volumes. I can’t even get to them now without some immoderate effort in time and space. And where would I start, what year would I explore? I do not think the archive office has delved into the volumes to categorize them by date. I don’t even know that other than randomly I have dated the books. I would have to approximate dates by reading through the entries and remembering the narrated event, and in that search I could add the pop and scoop that stories require. Ah, memory: the narrator in Sebald’s Rings of Saturn says, “But, in reality, memory fails us,” and I have annotated in the margins of that page this comment: “As always.” As it must. Hence can be born the stories with pop and scoop.

The person narrated in those past journals might appear unfamiliar to the person narrated in the present, though I am certain that a recent story told will include traces of that past character. I know that over the future years he will have been and will still be narrated in various other voices. I suppose those journals contain matters that are not lost but only submerged deep in the subconscious awaiting like the cicada broods for their moment to arise. But as long as they remain buried they are veiled and unstoried until suddenly something in the present—I read a journal— inspires a memory and a story is born. 

28 October 2025

This Was the End of a Beautiful Relationship

This past week for the last time I traveled 70 miles to have a final physical check-up exam with the family physician whom I have been seeing regularly for 35 years. He is retiring this year. During the past many years I have been his patient for whom he exhibited great patience. Outside of the relationship I have had with my children and siblings and one dear, dear friend, my relationship with this doctor is the longest one of my life. I am seventy-eight years old and it is doubtful that I will have opportunity to enjoy such a long relationship with another physician or really, with anyone else. Our intimacies were profound; I have allowed this man to probe every orifice of my body, and he did so gently and unreservedly at least once every year for each of the thirty-five years; sometimes if my hypochondriacal tendencies flared I visited with whom more than once in a year. I remember once, years ago, arriving home one Sunday evening after a personal trip East and driving directly from the airport to the emergency room of the hospital to relievedly find him there on duty: I learned that he was also an emergency room trauma doctor. I was having difficulty breathing and the admitting nurses thought that perhaps I was having a heart attack. I wasn’t and I almost knew it, though in my hypochondriacal fantasies I could have been experiencing a myocardial infarction having never had one before and knowing only what it looked like from the television shows I watched. And that night in the emergency room—because it was late and I was frantic—he cared for whatever was wrong with me physically and psychologically. Over the years with his attentions, he gave me the freedoms that I sought so that I could think myself healthy, and he supported me when I was suffering actually or hypochondriacally. He listened to my plaints and took me seriously in either case. When I would ask for a procedure—a colonoscopy, repair of a trigger finger, the freezing off of keratosis on various places on my vain body—he would right away order that precise procedure. At some point we actually did discover some real cardiac issues and he sent me to a specialist who was very skilled but was also too busy or disinterested in me as a person to listen. The cardiologist performed an endoscopy, discovered a bicuspid valve and an aortic aneurysm, and made some direct recommendations; I never saw him again nor would he respond to my phone calls. Of late I have experienced an outbreak of eczema and recorded the shortest doctor’s appointment ever—two minutes—and I left with a prescription. But over the years, visits with my family physician did not last less than twenty minutes and often extended to forty-five minutes and sometimes to an hour.. I always left his exam room feeling relieved and healed. On the last visit this past week, at the end of the exam we embraced and said goodbye. We had never done that before.

I had begun my visits with him when I had moved from New York to Menomonie, Wisconsin, the latter a semi-rural town harboring a moderate sized university that was a part of the University of Wisconsin system. I was a member of the faculty there. In New York I had not thought to ever need a family physician—I was young and my body seemed to function as it was supposed to and it did so mostly in silence. I also didn’t have the slightest idea how to find a doctor even if I knew what I was looking for in a primary care physician. I don’t think I ever had heard the term before I settled in Menomonie. In my twenties I became a long-distance runner, and I began to pay greater attention to the states of my body and especially as my body began to make some unfamiliar noises: my knees and feet would hurt and so they said I ought to see a podiatrist. He prescribed orthotics that seemed to work best when I held them in my hands. As a runner I learned to pay attention to my body and it talked back at me regularly. I began to notice every twinge and twist. But back then I did not have a family physician and attributed any ache and pain to the number of miles I had run that week.

 But when I moved to Menomonie with wife, child and two cats, I thought it advisable to seek out a family physician, and I asked my all-in-one holistic advisor, massage therapist and health product dispenser for a recommendation and she advised him because he was sympathetic to alternative treatments and medicines and was a good listener and by reputation a good doctor. I made my first appointment. I suppose our initial meeting was like a blind date!

It is ironic now to consider that it might have been his patience and his proximity that fertilized my hypochondriacal tendencies. He was so close and the clinic so relatively small that at any ache or twinge, slight as it might be, I could make an immediate appointment, drive to the clinic, and he would diagnose . . . usually not much was amiss though he would advise me in a soothing language and tone that, yes, I was going to live. When it became available, I added myself on to the patient portal where I could view a lot of things medical—appointments scheduled, test results most of which I could not understand. On this portal a patient could send messages to their care team and on which they might respond. I took frequent advantage of this means of communication and he patiently and with concern responded within twenty-four hours and usually in much less time, even when he was not even scheduled to be in the office. Though doctors take days off, his care of me knew no pause or impatience. When more serious conditions arose, he either treated me himself or directed me to appropriate specialists all of whom were skilled and none of whom were available as was he. He always was so.

And I am wondering what is now gone, and what does it mean to have lost his care. In that final visit he handed me a xeroxed sheet of available primary care physicians and recommended a few I might try, but really, he did not speak with any great enthusiasm. And it was like an experience of on-line dating: who “looked” right! Maybe he was experiencing a loss as well, not unmoved to arrive after thirty-five years at an end of our times together. During those years he and I have shared marriages, divorces, and re-marriages. We would speak of our children and their growths and difficulties, their marriages and our divorces, and finally our children’s children’s activities. We had never met outside of his office in which we shared intimacies that I do not believe we would have presented outside of the office. In there was sacred space, not, I suppose, unlike that of the confession booth. I am not sure I would have ever wanted to meet outside of the office. No place could ever be as intimate as was that exam room space. We were not friends or lovers; but if love is to care for the other, then he loved me. He was my loving caregiver. 

I think I am now too old to develop an intimate relationship with another physician. Oh, I talk to my cardiologist but . . . well, that conversation is always focused on my heart and its issues and does not begin to enter into the personal stuff I always shared with my primary care physician. In my cardiologist’s office I don’t even have to take off my clothes, though it is true that in the winter when I wear many layers I have to partially de-layer so he can hear my heart! No, over the 35 years of medical visits with my family physician developed an intimacy I expect not to experience again in a doctor’s office. As I age the world around me grows smaller and less populated, and I will miss my relationship with him. 

 

22 October 2025

The Pond in Winter



The chill in the air bespeaks the coming of Winter. The time is still only mid-October but the falling rain and gusty winds will soon pull the leaves off of the trees and they will be bare. Thoreau writes in his journal, “I knew a crazy man who walked into an empty pulpit one Sunday and, taking up a hymn-book, remarked: “We have had a good fall for getting in corn and potatoes. Let us sing Winter.” So, Thoreau says, ‘Let us sing winter.’ What else can we sing, and our voices be in harmony with the season?” As for me, I am not yet ready to sing winter, not anymore, and when it does arrive, I hope to be packing for warmer climates. 

But I have been thinking about “The Pond in Winter” a chapter in Thoreau’s Walden. When Thoreau lived on its shores and in winter the pond froze over to a depth of a foot and a half, Thoreau surveyed Walden. There exists his detailed surveying maps showing his considerable skill and thoroughness in the practice of surveying. In fact, Thoreau eventually worked as a professional surveyor, so accomplished in this profession that to support himself he traveled all about New England contracting as a surveyor. Thoreau was hardly an unemployed, unemployable, idle man, as he has too often been accused over the years. It may be that his skill as a surveyor, as Linda Walls suggests, led to his discovery of Walden’s bottom and the fulfillment of his purpose for coming out there to live for two years, two months and two days. That purpose Thoreau declared was “to front only the essential facts of life, and see if he could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when he came to die, discover that he had not lived, living being so dear.” I think that by his thorough survey he had found Walden’s bottom and had found in that bottom what he called reality. Walden Pond, he discovered, was not bottomless but was, indeed, rock solid at its bottom. Though Thoreau celebrates that “while men believe in the infinite some ponds will thought to be bottomless,” he knew that in such belief there would be no “hard bottom and rocks in place” which could be called reality. All would remain ungrounded, unsteady, and in constant flux. If a belief in bottomless ponds is a belief in the infinite, then there would be for the individual no solid ground on which to stand, there would exist no rock-bottom and no reality. I believe that this discovered bottom of Walden was the symbol Thoreau sought. Thoreau knew that it was necessary in and for his life to discover the bottom, to front the absolute essentials. He wrote, “Let us settle ourselves, and work and wedge our feet downward through the mud and slush of opinion, and prejudice, and tradition, and delusion, and appearance, that alluvion which covers the globe, through Paris and London, through New York and Boston and Concord, through church and state, through poetry and philosophy and religion, till we come to a hard bottom and rocks in place, which we can call reality, and say, This is, and no mistake, and then begin, having a point d’appui . . . a place where you might found a wall or a state . . . .” Thoreau declared, “There is a solid bottom everywhere," and one had only to find it. Our rock-solid bottom is discoverable: “We will not be shipwrecked on a vain reality,” Thoreau asserted.

 Thoreau’s sounding and surveying of Walden made the pond for him a symbol for he discovered that when he drew his rule across the greatest breadth and length of the map, he discovered that “the lines intersected exactly (italics in the original) at the point of its greatest depth.” He considered that the law of the two diameters that had been true for the pond might be also true for an individual’s ethics—their personal moral code—as well. As the length and breadth of Walden intersected exactly at the point of its place greatest depth, so that intersection in a person would occur at the point of greatest depth. Thoreau wrote that one could “draw lines through the length and breadth of the aggregate of a man’s particular daily behaviors and waves of life into his coves and inlets, and where they intersect will be the height or depth of his character.” I suppose that the length and breadth of any person’s daily behaviors would intersect at a point of greatest depth, but sometimes that depth would be found not to be very deep and the reality shallow. The artist, Ben Shahn, complained that his own early work lacked the reality of his self. He said, “And then I began to realize that however professional my work might appear, even however original it might be, it still did not contain the central person which for good or ill, was myself . . . . All my views and notions on life and politics, all this material and much more which constitute the substance of whatever person I was, lay outside the scope of my own painting.” Shahn’sr ecognized that his paintings might have come from his skill but not from his reality, and he had to sound his depth to paint that reality, survey the length and breadth of his activities, measure where they intersected, and sound his depth.

I’ve wondered: does one first sound one’s Walden to find its depth. Or does one find its depth by measuring where the length and breadth of activities intersect?  Of course, for a bottomless pond there would be no depth and therefore no intersection of length and breadth would ascertain the place of greatest depth. Indeed, there would be no depth. There would be, then, no knowledge of self. But I wonder what would be the skill required to survey the length and breadth of a person’s action, to find the point of the intersection of the lines and to know the depth of character. I think Thoreau knew that to be good was not an immanence but an effort in the daily life of the individual. In Iris Murdoch’s novel, The Nice and the Good, Willi, a holocaust survivor says, “We are not good people, and the best we can hope for is to be gentle, to forgive each other and to forgive the past, to be forgiven ourselves and to accept the forgiveness, and to return again to the beautiful unexpected strangeness of the world.” That would be one answer, I suppose, but it would not be one Thoreau might profess. He wrote, “It is not necessary for a man to put himself in opposition to society, but rather. to maintain himself in whatever attitude he finds himself through obedience to the laws of his being, which will never be one of opposition to a just government, if he could chance to meet with such.” 

But yes, let me measure the breadth of my daily activities and the lengths to which I go to fulfill them. And where they intersect I will discover my depth, my rock bottom, my reality.

 

06 October 2025

Maybe more than the time of year

                       

Maybe it was the time of year or maybe it was the time of man. Rosh Hashanah had ended the previous week and now, ten day later the shofar signaled the end of Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement, the most sacred day of the year. Torah says on that day you should afflict yourself, and the Rabbis have interpreted the requirement to mean that for the whole of the day—from sundown to sundown—one should abstain from food and drink, from anointing, from wearing leather and from sexual intercourse. These denials should allow one to focus the mind not on the body but on the spirit. Teshuvah, the act of return after the confession, offers to the world a soul that has been forgiven and that can enter life in a new beginning. Sometimes over the years I have experienced this state, but throughout any number of bygone and recent years not so often. And certainly not lately. The historical materialist in me remains suspicious of this ideology. Freud has suggested that the past is never lost, forgotten or forgiven, and I have long held with Faulkner who had said in his acceptance speech for the Nobel Prize, “The past is never dead. It is not even past.” Nonetheless, at Yom Kippur this year as in sixty-five years previous I have afflicted myself: did not eat or drink, did not anoint myself; I wore leather only on my belt so that my trousers would not fall down and I did not engage in sexual activity. This last was the least difficult, such as is my age. But at the end of my fast and at the blowing of the shofar I was aware that I had not experienced any spiritually transcendent moment, and  I left the shul not expecting my transgressions to have been forgiven and forgotten. I do not know when I might have lost the capacity for the experience, if indeed I ever did possess it, but now it was certainly  . . . unavailable.

            But two evenings later, on that Saturday evening at the concert, I enjoyed just such a spiritually transcendent moment. John McCutcheon’s presence, by which I mean the songs he sang and the stories he told to the room of perhaps 200-300 folks, many of them gray-headed or bald, many hopefully retired and at some peace, all who had been through the wars both social and political and who had come there to be present, John reminded us of the struggle which over the years he had shared with us and spoke and sang of the work still to be done. He sang of the joys and sorrows of this life, and he told stories of the sorrows and joys he had experienced as he traveled and performed throughout the world. I sensed that some of what he said had been scripted prior, but there in his narrative I felt unrehearsed emotion and meaning in the choice of stories and songs he would sing. 

            I have had for almost forty years’ experience with McCutcheon’s work and have attended more than several of his concerts in a variety of venues and states. In my storage unit are a dozen or more of his CDs. I do not listen to CDs anymore, but that situation demands another blog post. But last night my seventy-eight year old body, uncomfortable as a way of life and uncomfortable in the unupholstered bridge chairs at the Cedar Cultural Center, seated between my partner and my 31 year old daughter, who perhaps didn’t know to what experience to which she had accepted invitation and who was perhaps unprepared for what she would hear, but I was overwhelmed by an experience of transcendency at the intensity, sincerity and beauty of his singing and his playing on a variety of instruments, banjo, guitar, fiddle, hammered dulcimer, autoharp and piano. And I mean, not playing as in cursory performance, but singing and playing with a passion and a demand for social justice, for human rights, with an advocacy for the better parts of all of us in the multitude who sat with him. There was love in that room, and I knew somehow that I was not alone.

McCutcheon had created in that not very large room a community where for some brief moments all dissension ceased, and we sat and smiled together as we sang. Oh, we knew that there was an ugly world out there—McCutcheon reminded us of that in his choice of songs—but the songs and singing kept the wolf at bay for just a few moments. I felt warm despite the air-conditioning, secure and almost at peace amidst the chaos. For just a little while as we sang, hallelujah, the great storm was indeed over.
            As I stepped out into the sweltering October night, I knew, the storm that had been ended in there raged still out here. But for just three hours in there it had, yes, been over. And that would be enough for now.

26 September 2025

Prep Time

The recipe for my Minnesota Wild Rice Soup said that prep time would take ten minutes—though that measure would not include the 30 minutes preparing the wild rice which is actually a semi-aquatic type of grass and not rice at all. Preparing the wild rice should have been considered prep work because when it was cooked it would be added to the soup and not cooked as the soup. I could even prepare the rice ahead of time, test for its chewiness and add it at the appropriate time. I did so.

Why exactly should prep time be distinguished from say, cook time?  Prep is the necessary gathering, peeling and chopping of the vegetable and fleshly ingredients that will constitute the meal when cooked, though to be sure, as a vegetarian I do not prep any meat or fish product. The distinct designation of prep time seems another example of the establishment of time standards by which activities can be measured and life organized. In the novel Measuring the World, Daniel Kehlmann attributes to Alexander von Humboldt the idea that measurement creates reality. Numbers become a means of controlling chaos. The notice of prep and cook times places boundaries on the process of meal preparation and makes chaos containable. But Thoreau writes “We are compelled to live so thoroughly and sincerely reflecting on our steps, reverencing our life, that we never make allowance for the possible changes.” For Thoreau it was the wild he sought, perhaps the wild another name for chaos. He opens the essay “Walking,” with an advocacy of wildness: “I wish to speak a word for Nature, for absolute freedom and wildness, as contrasted with a freedom and culture merely civil.” I do not think Thoreau would adhere much to the establishment of requisite prep times. Me? I am a somewhat careless cook and experience the kitchen chaos as my usual modus operandi. Sometimes it seems a bit wild in there. And yes, I understand that defining a time for prep time and cook time does seem to control the chaos of running between cabinets and shelves pulling down and drawing out and preparing ingredients immediately required to the recipe. But the establishment of prep time and cook time are irrelevant to me: I prefer to prepare the meal in some leisure listening to music to accompany the rhythmic chopping, peeling and shredding. I sometimes wear ear buds to leave my partner in her silence and her reading in the next room. Also, during what is referred to as prep time I place at some safe distance an alcoholic beverage to accompany my engagement in gathering and preparing the ingredients for the dish. I am careful to to keep any of the worked-over pieces of vegetables as they are being gathered, chopped, ground and shredded from flying into the shimmering liquid in the crystal tumbler. I am a careless cook and I never do meet the standard set by the prep time established in the recipe. I turn the volume of the music up. I take another sip.

Prep time. The readying of materials that when done are to be transformed into the meal. But I wonder now why prep time is separate from cook time. Is it really a distinct and separate activity? Ecclesiastes says that there is a season set for everything, though Kohelet does not designate an order or time dimension for the occurrences of anything; he says only that there is a time for everything. “There is a time to be born and a time to die; a time to kill and a time to heal; a time to weep and a time to laugh; a time to seek and a time to lose, a time to plant and a time to reap, a time to rend and a time to sew.” And so to follow Kohelet there must be a time to prepare and a time to cook! A time to consume and a time to wash the dishes. But one thing is also very clear to me from Ecclesiastes: everything will occur in a life though there is no set time or even order for when or for how long anything might occur. Except, of course, for the times of being born and dying. Nor is there much direction as to what is to be done while waiting for each happening. The recipe sheet says that prep time is 10 minutes, but that is not consistent to my movements. I am not so ordered. In fact, I am not prepping, I am cooking dinner. And it all began at the market! Thus, it might be that our lives can be understood as always prep work and simultaneously always cooking. I do not need to be cautioned about prep time because in fact I couldn’t cook anything without first preparing; why then is prep time kept separate from cook time on the recipe sheet. What chaos is being controlled? Having read through the recipe and setting my priorities I think that I can decide how much time I want to spend setting a dinner on the table, when to begin the process and how quickly or leisurely I want to work. Thoreau welcomes the chaos—wildness—as a way to be alive in the world. In the film “The Taste of Things, cooking is life. We are always cooking. As I chop my vegetables I wear my cut gloves to forestall the time to rend. But as Hamlet says, if it be not now, yet it will come. I don’t know why I care to distinguish prep time from cook time. It is all one continuous activity. 

05 September 2025

Fra Lippo Lippi

A flâneur, a purposely lost rambler, is how I like to characterize myself. I know that I hadn’t always been such; once I had worn my clothes tight-fitting and my shoes stiff and highly polished. But I had experienced some wonderful moments when I knew what it felt like to wear my clothes loose. But it was an all too brief summer and when it ended, so, too, did my sauntering; I returned once more to my tight-fitting wardrobe and stiff shoes. Sometimes, even Thoreau would complain that “it sometimes happens that I cannot easily shake off the village. The thought of some work will run in my head and I am not where my body is—I am out of my senses.” That is, though his body is walking his mind is bound too tight. There had been, of course, those times when my walk was no saunter: I had felt too encumbered and unfree, and I would discuss with my therapist the unsatisfactory experience and the sources for my anxieties. I learned a few things and sauntered more, and during some walks there would occur transcendent moments when the world and me were transformed. Thoreau says he thinks “not much of the actual . . . It is a sort of vomit in which the unclean love to wallow.” Whew! But no, HDT doesn’t avoid the actual—in a sense it was where he always started—but at times he could not transcend it.  I hold with Robert Browning’s Fra Lippo Lippi who says, “This world’s no blot for us/Nor blank; it means intensely, and means good—/To find its meaning is my meat and drink.” In a way this was Thoreau’s method.

Fra Lippo Lippi struck out from the staid, cautious style then in vogue in the art communities and developed the realist manner of painting though not without harsh critique and chastisement of his work from his clerical superiors. They would have had him paint the soul so that the people would forget the physical, their hard labor, their oppression and their poverty. His superiors scolded,  

Your business is not to catch men with show,

With homage to the perishable clay,

But lift them over it, ignore it all,

Make them forget there’s such a thing as flesh.

Your business is to paint the souls of men—

Lippi stressed that if he painted the world about him it would lead people to the soul. To lose the physical world was not the purpose to which art aspired. Art, Lippi believed, returned the world to us. In a conversation with a guard who had apprehended Lippi as he returned to the monastery after a night of ribaldry Lippi responded: 

For don’t you mark? We’re made so that we love

First when we see them painted, things that we have passed 

Perhaps a hundred times nor cared to see;

And so they are better, painted—better to us

Which is the same thing. Art was given for that;

God gives us to help each other so,
Lending our minds out.

His art, Lippi asserted, should give people the world that they were too busy, too distracted or too oppressed to see. For Lippi art might be the invitation to saunter and to transcend. Art might be the impetus for the achievements of other freedoms as well, as Thoreau seemed to understand. Those who would so saunter would see the world’s meaning that they had not before been aware. They would find in the art what would scratch their itches and then come to apprehend soul. Indeed, Lippi’s art would provide them access to meaning and it would begin with the physical world. Art was not a distraction but a summons. Centuries later Bertold Brecht would hold that his theatre was meant to portray the world for his audience and not an opportunity to lose that world in the exhaustion of catharsis. He did not want his audiences to sit passively and forget themselves in a work’s story, Brecht wanted his plays to inspire his audience to think about and question the world they live in. 

Once I had believed that all I needed to know was that beauty was truth and truth beauty, but since then I had experienced and learned a great deal. I recognized that beauty was not an immanence within the object but appeared as an event. Beauty was a description of a feeling that arose in as a response to a relationship between the particular work of art, between anything experienced and the one experiencing it. And I considered that beauty occurred when an experienced tension in the work was felt, and beauty happened from the experience of the release of that felt tension. That release made possible moments of transcendence for the one experiencing the work. I have been listening for years to Leonard Bernstein’s recordings of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony. Beethoven’s symphony was one of the most beautiful works I have known, though I admit that I have experienced a great deal of beauty in my life. But every time I would hear that music he experienced beauty. He remembered Harvey Sachs’s description of the third movement of the Ninth that followed the difficult, turbulent, sometimes even violent images of the first two movements. He writes “ . . . the third [movement] tells us that we have both lost and won—that as aware human beings, we have no choice but to wade through the horror and anguish and then die, but that we are able, from time to time, to see beyond and soar above these facts and to understand just enough to be able to appreciate the beauty of being moral.” For me the third movement released the tensions that the first two movements had caused and it prepared for the magnificence of the final choral movement. Sachs’s words described transcendence, to recognize the tensions and to experience a resolution of them, to feel one’s itches and to scratch them. Then I knew beauty; then I had beauty. Yes, the experience of beauty scratched one’s itches. All experience of beauty in art—visual, aural, tactile, gastronomical, aromatical—what Lippi referred to as simple beauty, would be found in the quotidian and it was from there that transcendence would happen. 

I think I have searched in my life for beauty and now understand that its potential was present always with me. Walking down a dusty, noisy street today, I thought, yes, the experience of beauty and the source of transcendence comes from having faith in the seed. That within that seed there was a tree that would burst forth and in time flourish. Beauty was truth as Fra Lippo Lippi had asserted. “If you get simple beauty and naught else,” he says, “you get about the best thing God invents—/That’s somewhat; and you’ll find the soul you have missed/within yourself, when you return him thanks.” The awareness of the soul was not a permanent presence but a transitory happening in the experience of beauty. The soul was called into being by the experience of beauty. Transcendence he knew now was not to lose the world in abstraction; rather transcendence would be experienced when the world appeared with new perspective. The experience of beauty led him right back to the world, and he would give thanks by making available the experience of beauty for others. 

 

 

01 September 2025

If it Were Up to Me

The latest obscene shooting at Annunciation School in Minneapolis is yet another violent and deadly occurrence in what is turning out as a horrible, horrible several years that has been filled with wars, mass shootings, assassinations, and among other things, a cruel, ugly, vindictive government headed by Trump and meekly followed by sycophantic (and terrified) Republicans. The latest shooting is another instanceof the callous disregard for human life displayed by opponents of gun control. The shooter, Robin Westman, wrote in her journal dated July 4, “Oh my God! I got it! I have a shotgun! It was not too difficult at all!” Exactly the problem! She added that a high-powered rifle was next on the shopping list. I read in the New York Times that earlier this year Ms. Westman wrote that she had been watching so many mass shooting videos online that she worried about being placed on a Federal Bureau of Investigation watch list. But in early July, her state-issued gun permit had arrived in the mail. Exactly the problem! 

            I will not rehash the obvious arguments for gun control in the United States. But I will angrily address stupid comments by people like J.D. Vance who said that the shooting suggested that more mental health care is necessary. Of course, the Republican cadre had already assented to cuts in Medicaid and Medicare, to health care fundings for mental health facilities. The hypocrisy is blatant and dangerous but will be almost certainly ignored by a deliberately blind, intellectually vacant and ethically compromising (and compromised) MAGA electorate. 

            Yes, I know that greater access to mental health ought to be made available; so, too, by the way, should medical care for the physical well-being. The two are not disconnected. But first it must be acknowledged that if the guns weren’t so easily available then those suffering with psychological problems wouldn’t have access to them. No access, no mass shootings. I have heard statistics that there are more guns in the United States than people. For every 100 people there are 120 guns. There are 393 million guns in the United States.

            I watch a great many detective shows many of which are British: Inspector Morse, Lewis, Shetland, Vera, Grantchester, Endeavour, Brokenwood Mysteries, Foyle’s War, George GentlyMidsommer Murders. etc. etc. etc. Firearms in Great Britain are heavily controlled: one must show a very good reason for having one and then be subjected to a heavy vetting process. Pistols are banned. The detectives in these shows carry no weapons. Unless confrontation with and arrest of a suspect seems to be dangerous, guns are not issued to the police (the uniformed coppers!) including the detectives. Yes, the criminals sometimes do have weapons—guns—but the difficulty of obtaining them means that acquisition must have been difficult and for most criminals been y rarely successful. Most suspects do not have weapons, and the detectives chase after and arrest the bad ones without need of guns. Indeed, often the arresting detectives and uniformed police have to chase after the suspect; many discover they need to be in better shape.

So many problems might be resolved if guns were less available. Certainly a military presence in the cities of the United Sates would be unnecessary: but maybe Trump enjoys the military might he controls and strict gun control would render occupation by the National Guard unlikely.
With better access to health care so many troubled individuals might be helped before they went on a killing rage. I am weary of the days of prayer solution to the violence. The children were praying!! I have long believed that the skills to recognize and reject the hypocrisies of people like J.D. Vance ought to be developed in schools, newspapers and journals. 

As Cheryl Wheeler sings, there are many targets for blame for mass shootings, but “If it were up to me, I’d take away the guns!”