Archive for June, 2007

going sane: maps of happiness

I stuck with this book after what I thought was an infuriatingly smug first chapter, and I’m glad I did. The third and last chapter, “Sane Now”, is so potent a mixture of stuff-I’d-gradually-worked-out-for-myself and things-I-hadn’t-thought-of-but-that-make-excellent-sense that I had to stop myself from repeatedly writing “It’s so true!” in the margins in purple biro. With similar heroic restraint I shall excerpt choice bits but refrain from quoting it all.

“The sane parents can never get protecting their child right; indeed don’t think of parenting as something that one can get right, but as something that one muddles through. The sane parent knows that being a child means being unprepared for life, and so needing a parent in order to live it; but the sane parent also knows that life is not exactly the kind of thing that can be prepared for. For a child growing up, life is by definition full of surprises; the adult tries to keep these as surprises, rather than traumas, through a devoted attentiveness. But sane parenting always involves a growing sense of how little, as well as how much, one can protect one’s child from; of just how little a life can be programmed. Sane parents do not invent their children, they just create the conditions in which they might grow.

“The sane adult is protective – and not only of children, but of himself and others – in a way that avoids covertly undermining the strengths of those who are apparently in need of protection (“The friends of the born nurse/ are always getting worse,” as W. H. Auden wrote). The sane adult assumes that it is possible for people to get pleasure from who they happen to be, and that part of this pleasure is bound up with versions of self-reliance that are not merely a more or less bitter denial of the need for other people.”

“…Adults are the ones who are supposed to know what’s best for children (quite soon, of course, the children start answering back); it is the oppressive legacy, more insidious than is often noticed, of using parents and children as the model for what goes on between adults that adults begin to behave like parents to other adults. Sane adult kindness involves finding out, one way or another, what the other person thinks is best for her, and then making a choice; no sane adults can know in any absolute sense what is best for them, but no sane kind adults could claim to know others better than they know themselves. They could claim to know them in other ways than they know themselves, but not in better ways. And, by the same token, no sane, kind person can accept a description of another person as in any sense true if that person herself does not accept it.

“The sane, kind person believes that getting on with people (including oneself) is more important than knowing or understanding people. That, in fact, if knowing or understanding people has a point, it is that it is in the service of getting on with them. For the sane person good manners can only possibly mean being a genial person; and the enemy of geniality, of the kind of sociability that makes people feel better, is the excessive need to be special…”

I could go on, but you know; just read it.

what twitter has done to my blogging style

Asquigglemar depicted, also: placeholder for discussion of running, three months in.

my daughters wake up from long naps in the car

These are the first things they say.

Julia: Yay! People!

Claire (thoughtfully): I love power.

to asquigglemar and beyond!

Accompanied by Claire and Julia on kazoo.

wednesday

Got home exhausted. Sophie, James, William, Salome, Jack, Milo, Jan, Ric, Quinn, Aaron and Ada came over. I made zucchini orzo and warm kale salad for nine, tidied up, gave Claire and Ada a bath, drank too much and made my usual terrible jokes. Really great night.

foots




dsc_6509.jpg

Originally uploaded by Goop on the lens


eek

Applied to Viable Paradise. Now bracing myself for inevitable crushing rejection. At least I got a mention on Language Log!

my father-in-law is awesome

Jan: I hate it when people start getting older and they have to tell you all about their heart, or their liver, or their skin.

Ric: I call it the organ recital.

good newses

  • zombies at Sunset Scavenger finally delivered our composting bin
  • owl is back, after being gone for a week
  • Claire’s favourite teddy bear possibly found?
  • respected ancestors in town
  • celebratory dinner reservations at Chouchou!

feeling a bit better

Wine helps. Thanks to everyone who sent jokes. Gold star to Skud for making both me and Jeremy LOL:

Q. Why do Marxists drink soy chai lattes?
A. Because proper tea is theft.