en

Crouch Blake

  • Riya Johnhas quoted10 months ago
    For anyone who has wondered what their life might look like at the end of the road not taken.
  • Riya Johnhas quoted10 months ago
    What might have been and what has been

    Point to one end, which is always present.

    Footfalls echo in the memory

    Down the passage which we did not take

    Towards the door we never opened.

    —T. S. Eliot, “Burnt Norton”
  • Riya Johnhas quoted10 months ago
    Life starts all over again when it gets crisp in the fall.
  • Sia Delunahas quotedlast year
    “Quantum mechanics. Intro stuff mainly. Nothing too terribly sexy.”
  • Sia Delunahas quotedlast year
    “Just a question, but do you see yourself more as a research scientist or a teacher these days?”
  • Sia Delunahas quotedlast year
    Now, if the people around me”—he gestures at his students who have begun to crowd in—“are sharp enough to absorb knowledge by sheer proximity to me…great. But the passing on of knowledge, as it were, doesn’t interest me. All that matters is the science. The research.”
  • Sia Delunahas quotedlast year
    It’s the beautiful thing about youth.

    There’s a weightlessness that permeates everything because no damning choices have been made, no paths committed to, and the road forking out ahead is pure, unlimited potential.
  • Sia Delunahas quotedlast year
    He says to me, almost like a confession, “It’s been a long road. I can’t quite believe I’m sitting here actually looking at you. Talking to you. I know you don’t understand, but there’s so much I want to ask.”

    “About what?”

    “What it’s like to be you.”

    “What do you mean?”

    He hesitates, then: “How do you feel about your place in the world, Jason?”

    I say slowly, deliberately, “That’s an interesting question considering the night you’ve put me through.”

    “Are you happy in your life?”
  • Sia Delunahas quotedlast year
    “My life is great. It’s just not exceptional. And there was a time when it could have been.”

    “You killed your ambition, didn’t you?”

    “It died of natural causes. Of neglect.”

    “And do you know exactly how that happened? Was there a moment when—?”

    “My son. I was twenty-seven years old, and Daniela and I had been together a few months. She told me she was pregnant. We were having fun, but it wasn’t love. Or maybe it was. I don’t know. We definitely weren’t looking to start a family.”

    “But you did.”

    “When you’re a scientist, your late twenties are so critical. If you don’t publish something big by thirty, they put you out to pasture.”
  • Sia Delunahas quotedlast year
    “I was trying to create the quantum superposition of an object that was visible to the human eye.”

    “Why did you abandon your research?”

    “When Charlie was born, he had major medical issues for the first year of his life. I needed a thousand hours in a cleanroom, but I couldn’t get there fast enough. Daniela needed me. My son needed me. I lost my funding. Lost my momentum. I was the young, new genius for a minute, but when I faltered, someone else took my place.”

    “Do you regret your decision to stay with Daniela and make a life with her?”

    “No.”

    “Never?”
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