“You think your pain and your heartbreak are unprecedented in the history of the world, but then you read.” The history of the world is the history of telling others who and what we are — from tribal markings to national flags to family crests to pronoun-specifying email signatures. Every war that has ever been […]
Tag: Books
6 new books to See from November
Our assignment that will assist you browse the new ordinary is fueled by readers. To enjoy unlimited access to our own journalism, subscribe now . A page-turning debut book that is already optioned from Netflix to get Shonda Rhimes to create; a group of short stories according to a favorite online comic about impostor syndrome, nervousness, […]
Octavia Butler on Creative Drive, the World-Building Power of Our Desires, and How We Become Who We Are
“Love quiets fear. And a sweet and powerful positive obsession blunts pain, diverts rage, and engages each of us in the greatest, the most intense of our chosen struggles.” After the glorious accident of having been born at all, there are myriad ways any one life could be lived. The lives we do live are […]
The Shadow Elephant: A Tender Illustrated Fable About What It Takes to Unblue Our Sorrows and Lighten the Load of Our Heaviest Emotions
In praise of that quiet, nonjudgmental place of permission where all healing begins. The strange thing about life, the wondrous thing about life, is that it is impossible to dull one hue of our emotional experience without dulling the entire spectrum, impossible to feel deeply at one end of it without feeling as deeply at […]
Being but Men: Astronomer Natalie Batalha Reads Dylan Thomas’s Cosmic Serenade to Trees and the Wonder of Being Human
“Children in wonder watching the stars, is the aim and the end.” Trees are unworded thoughts, periscopes of perspective. They are both less alive than we think and more sentient than we thought. In them, we see what we are and see what we can be. From them, we draw our best metaphors for love, […]
Cease doomscrolling on Social Networking and See a Novel
2020 is the year I chose to cut back to vacant body calories. That is correct, I chased off the dumb crap from social networking. Since we’re likely to run increasingly more doomscrolling since the election and 2020 proceeds its infamy, I recommend you to quit eating electronic junk, and begin reading a novel. To […]
How Alive Are We? Alan Turing, Trees, and the Wonder of Life
“The more a creature’s life is worth, the less of it is alive.” When the young Alan Turing (June 23, 1912–June 7, 1954) lost the love of his life, Christopher, to a bacterium contracted from cow’s milk, the grief-savaged future father of computing comforted his beloved’s grief-savaged mother by telling her that “the body provides […]
14 Learnings from 14 Years of Brain Pickings
On the weight of the world and the weight of the sky. Brain Pickings was born on October 23, 2006, as a short email to seven friends. Seven years and several incomprehensible million readers into its existence, I began what has since become an annual tradition — a distillation of the most important things I […]
Tenacity, the Art of Integration, and the Key to a Flexible Mind: Wisdom from the Life of Mary Somerville, for Whom the Word “Scientist” Was Coined
Inside the hallmark of a great scientist and a great human being — the ability to hold one’s opinions with firm but unfisted fingers. This essay is adapted from my book Figuring A middle-aged Scottish mathematician rises ahead of the sun to spend a couple of hours with Newton before the day punctuates her thinking […]
Notification men’s Tales through their Automobiles
Watches and automobiles share a frequent thread. In a number of ways these trappings of people who have disposable income are very cliché. A a classic Porsche may function as shortcut to trendy to get well-heeled guys of a particular bent. But under the veneer of showboating tend to be deeply personal stories. From the […]