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02 March 2008 @ 08:57 pm
In Praise of Inertia  
I took Bowdu to Cesar E. Chavez today, where the kite flyers were out in droves. I haven't delighted in flying my own kite since I was maybe six years old, but I do admire the array of shapes and colors set against a clear California sky. So many creative possibilities crafted from paper and nylon and mere plastic sheets! As I was passing underneath a purple dragon with intricately layered translucent gold and pink wings, I heard a sharp male voice bark out from behind me,

"THOMAS. GET over here, or you won't LEARN anything."

And this prepubescent kid with his hands stuffed in his hooded sweatshirt pockets and a bored pout pasted on his face followed the kite line back to his father, who continued to chide him for standing there slack-jawed and useless (he actually used that word) -- for not appreciating the inherent aesthetic and scientific wonder of kite-flying, I guess.

For some reason, the incident instantly brought to mind Lu Xun's story, "風箏 (Kite)." The narrator harbors a deep disdain for his little brother's fascination with kites, particularly the way he always stands and watches in dumb fascination when the neighborhood boys fly them out on beautiful days. One day, he discovers that his little brother has secretly constructed a butterfly kite, and in a fit of tyrannical rage, the older brother destroys the kite. Decades later, in adulthood, the narrator comes to realize that child's play is an essential component of human development, and that play itself can hold educational value. Chagrined, the narrator apologizes to his little brother, but the latter has completely forgotten the incident already. The apology is impotent. "Without hard feelings, forgiveness is a lie (無怨的恕, 說謊罷了)."

Anyway, the connection I made here was something along the lines of how well-meaning elders with ultra-rationalized conceptions of how one should spend their time will inevitably rob childhood of its most sacred, carefree moments. Because there SHOULD be times when you're allowed to just stand in the sun, silent and useless, doing nothing at all... Even now, I waste so much energy fighting mental sluggishness because I forget that part of the trick to "learning all the time" is not insisting on the educational value of every millisecond and allowing some of those moments to pass unnoticed and unaccounted for while your mind and your blood adjusts to inertia.

Did I ever learn how to play uselessly as a child? The closest I might have gotten might've been those hour-long sessions of propping myself upside-down against the back of the couch while I imagined walking around the entire apartment on the ceiling. Or no-handed bike riding in endless circles on a vacant and newly-paved parking lot, doing that as long as I could until sunset. Is this concentration, the focusing of attention upon a fine and repetitive task, or more like meditation, with a dissipation and release of self-awareness that I consider the opposite of concentration? Either way, I could do with a better grasp on one or the other right now.
 
 
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gillian: Diane and Gilly BFF!!![info]whoopseedaisy on March 3rd, 2008 05:51 am (UTC)
I remember when I was 12 years old practicing pitching a softball against a brick wall over and over and over again for hours and hours. I loved the competition against myself. I was excellent that season and then the joy wore off.

Dunno why I remembered that.

Kites remind me of Varanasi, the holiest city in Hindu India. The beggar children fight their kites just like in that book The Kite Runner. We spent the day with this little kid who was an incredible charmer, bought him lunch and took him with us everywhere. We even agreed to visit his "uncle's" silk shop and bought some scarves. At the end of the day we all threw in a couple of rupees and bought him and his friend a kite each.

That kid was something special. I should post a picture of him.
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connection closed[info]woquinoncoin on March 5th, 2008 05:35 am (UTC)
I haven't seen The Kite Runner, but thanks for sharing that story. I hope the kid was able to keep that kite and keep flying it for a long while.
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明馬[info]bafooz on March 3rd, 2008 09:07 am (UTC)
Ah, the joy of useless play - I suppose I had that when I got my first pony, a friend and I used to go out for hours and hours and just ride aimlessly, playing silly games and having fun. I still get weird melancholic pangs in the autumn - not here in CA, since not much differentiates autumn from anything else, but certainly back in VA where the autumn sky is very particularly an autumn sky; that was my favorite season to ride in, nice and cool and crisp, though the days were shorter. But the sky was always so wide and so blue, but not the brighter blue of summer - a more reserved blue, but I swear you can see the curvature of the earth better. I remember how free I used to feel & how lucky I was. Autumn rides on my pony - probably the only thing out of those miserable years I remember with great fondness!

I've found I'm either ON or catatonic. I need to find a better in between.
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connection closed[info]woquinoncoin on March 5th, 2008 05:42 am (UTC)
Those games and those adventures do everything to nurture imagination and creativity when young -- in retrospect, how very useful that kind of play is, you know? But would it have been as much fun if an adult had been there prodding you to go out there and make USE of your imagination today, kid!. Just doesn't sound right. ;)
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Alex[info]just_hsut_me on March 3rd, 2008 12:46 pm (UTC)
Sometimes it is said that there are two kinds of Buddhist meditation: stopping 止 and contemplating 觀. From my point of view, they both involve sitting.
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connection closed[info]woquinoncoin on March 4th, 2008 06:31 am (UTC)
I was trying to imagine what my Buddhist mother would say about meditation, as she has suggested we all make time to do so, though she's never been explicit about the principles.

I think that zhi is like the kind of meditation I hoped to achieve. Contemplation as a kind of mental stillness and fixation is just as desirable, whereas the concentration I'm thinking of is a similar mental process but also implies more immediate action.
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Heteroglossia[info]chientsai on March 3rd, 2008 01:17 pm (UTC)
Thank you for this post. Perhaps, some day, when I become a father, I will understand better what that father was thinking.

Right now I cannot help but think his words to his son are but words from the older to a younger him: "Only if I knew what I know now"?
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connection closed[info]woquinoncoin on March 4th, 2008 06:18 am (UTC)
I tend to think of it the other way, I suppose. If all the fathers and the mothers of today better understood or remembered what they thought in childhood... This is not to say that youth is always correct, but I still tend to think, perhaps idealistically, that there is more truth to childhood than adulthood, however obscured that truth may be from both.
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