![]() It read, “How will you go about finding that thing the nature of which is totally unknown to you?” I copied it down, and it has stayed with me since. A student came in bearing a quote from what she said was the pre-Socratic philosopher Meno. Three years ago I was giving a workshop in the Rockies. ![]() That’s where the most important things come from, where you yourself came from, and where you will go. Leave the door open for the unknown, the door into the dark. Rebecca Solnit, whose mind and writing are among the most consistently enchanting of our time, explores this tender tango with the unknown in her altogether sublime collection A Field Guide to Getting Lost ( public library). And yet therein lies our greatest capacity for growth and self-transcendence. ![]() “On how one orients himself to the moment,” Henry Miller wrote in reflecting on the art of living, “depends the failure or fruitfulness of it.” Indeed, this act of orienting ourselves - to the moment, to the world, to our own selves - is perhaps the most elusive art of all, and our attempts to master it often leave us fumbling, frustrated, discombobulated. ![]()
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