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Jenny Odell

How to Do Nothing

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  • forgetenothas quoted5 years ago
    As I disengaged the map of my attention from the destructive news cycle and rhetoric of productivity, I began to build another one based on that of the more-than-human community, simply through patterns of noticing. At first this meant choosing certain things to look at; I also pored over guides and used the California Academy of Science’s app, iNaturalist, to identify species of plants I had walked right by my entire life. As a result, more and more actors appeared in my reality: after birds, there were trees, then different kinds of trees, then the bugs that lived in them. I began to notice animal communities, plant communities, animal-plant communities; mountain ranges, fault lines, watersheds. It was a familiar feeling of disorientation, realized in a different arena. Once again, I was met with the uncanny knowledge that these had all been here before, yet they had been invisible to me in previous renderings of my reality.
  • Maria José Sandovalhas quoted4 years ago
    we could just relax and look up at the trees
  • Maria José Sandovalhas quoted4 years ago
    Stupid fools are those who are never satisfied with what they possess, but only lament what they cannot have
  • Maria José Sandovalhas quoted4 years ago
    particularly concerned with the addictive features of everyday technology
  • forgetenothas quoted5 years ago
    In Zen they say: If something is boring after two minutes, try it for four. If still boring, then eight. Then sixteen. Then thirty-two. Eventually one discovers that it is not boring at all.
    –JOHN CAGE
  • Stephanie Burckhardhas quoted5 months ago
    And it takes a break to remember that: a break to do nothing, to just listen, to remember in the deepest sense what, when, and where we are.
  • Stephanie Burckhardhas quoted5 months ago
    But if you do, make it “self-care” in the activist sense that Audre Lorde meant it in the 1980s, when she said that “[c]aring for myself is not self-indulgence, it is self preservation, and that is an act of political warfare.”
  • Stephanie Burckhardhas quoted5 months ago
    The Genius of Birds and had learned that crows are incredibly intelligent (in the way that humans measure intelligence, anyway) and can recognize and remember human faces.
  • Stephanie Burckhardhas quoted5 months ago
    This is an important distinction to make these days, when the phrase “self-care” is appropriated for commercial ends and risks becoming a cliché. As Gabrielle Moss, author of Glop: Nontoxic, Expensive Ideas That Will Make You Look Ridiculous and Feel Pretentious (a book parodying goop, Gwyneth Paltrow’s high-priced wellness empire), put it: self-care “is poised to be wrenched away from activists and turned into an excuse to buy an expensive bath oil.”2
  • Stephanie Burckhardhas quoted5 months ago
    As Gordon Hempton, an acoustic ecologist who records natural soundscapes, put it: “Silence is not the absence of something but the presence of everything.”23
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