24 March, 2013

The Coast of Utopia

'He’s a free man because he gives away freely. I’m beginning to understand the trick of freedom. Freedom can’t be a residue of what was unfreely given up, divided up like a fought-over loaf. Every giving up has to be self-willed, freely chosen, unenforceable. Each of us must forgo only what we choose to forgo, balancing our personal freedom of action against our need for the cooperation of other people- who are each making the same balance for themselves. What is the largest number of individuals who can pull this trick off? I would say it’s smaller than a nation, smaller than the ideal communities of Cabet or Fourier. I would say the largest number is smaller than three. Two is possible, if there is love, but two is not a guarantee.'
[Tom Stoppard - The Coast of Utopia: Shipwreck]

 

16 February, 2013

No vot

Sõbrad kirjutavad uusi laule
Ja laulavad vanu
Loome uusi tantse
Unustame vanad
Uued krutskid uued lood
nostalgia on hoor
põrgu uimasti
uinume koos




...selle ilusa kirjutise leidsin oma vanalt kõvalt kettalt. 


                           ??

28 November, 2012

I really miss home today

What if I never get to call those rusty beaches with reflections of factories and cranes my home again?






29 July, 2012

Kosmos

'But there is another side to the psychology of spaceflight. During their stay in space, astronauts have reported what author Frank White called the “overview effect” – they became filled with a sense of wonder and awe about the universe, and experienced spiritual epiphanies such as unity with nature, transcendence, and universal brotherhood. Space affords some incredible experiences. NASA psychologists have looked into the benefits of taking photographs from the International Space Station, which may have a salutary effect on the minds of astronauts (.pdf).
These positive effects seem to last. Psychologists studying astronauts who return to Earth report that they are less anxious, hypochondriacal, depressive, or aggressive. It seems that, during their stay in a tough environment, people are able to develop coping skills to deal with the challenge and stress, which they get to take with them back to Earth.'


I was born into unseen catastrophes and unseen discoveries. Perhaps I have space running in my veins. Perhaps I was born 3.7 miles from the  S U N.

In 1990:
  • The Space Shuttle Discovery places the Hubble Space Telescope in orbit revolutionizing astronomy;
  • Tim Berners-Lee publishes a more formal proposal for the World Wide Web and the first web page is written;
  • The First Known Case of AIDS is traced back to 1959;
  • The Space Probe Voyager launched in 1977 photographed the Solar System at a distance of 3.7 miles from the SUN;
  • 18 years after its launch the US Space Probe Pioneer reaches a distance of 46.5 billion miles beyond all planetary orbits;
  • Depletion of the Ozone Layer is discovered above the North Pole. 


[Client Mansell - Memories (Someone We'll Never Know)]


'Isn't this enough?

Just this world?

Just this beautiful, complex,
wonderfully unfathomable NATURAL world?'

'I am a tiny, insignificant, ignorant lump of carbon.
I have one life, and it is short
and unimportant…,
but thanks to recent scientific advances
I get to live twice as long
as my great great great great uncleses and auntses.
Twice as long to live this life of mine.
Twice as long to love this wife of mine.
Twice as many years of friends and wine.'

[Tim Minchin - Storm]


I want to shout and murder. 
'It takes a lot of nerve to destroy this wondrous earth.
We're only human; this at least we've learned.' 
[Bowerbirds]

Instead, I want to be filled with a sense of wonder. I want to be filled with all of this   s  p  a  c  e

We are stardust. I  W O U L D  N E V E R  D R E A D  D E A T H  I F  I  B E C A M E  O N E   W I T H  K O S M O S