Hi, Iām Sara, and this is Tiny Revolutions, a weekly dispatch of personal writing and links about the art of becoming who you are. Reply anytime, I love to hear from you.
Photo of swirling ice in the Foxe Basin of northern Canada courtesy of USGS
In last weekās issue, I linked to an article that suggested that, when faced with a difficult life decision, itās better to choose āenlargementā over happiness. The rationale being that we are really bad at predicting what makes us happy, so we should instead go in the direction of things that will expand our horizons.
Iāve been thinking about this idea all week, and about how if youāre not careful, itās easy to become trapped in a filter bubble of news and perspectives that just confirm your own beliefs and biases. How if youāre spending a fair amount of time online ā and who isnāt these days? ā in order to escape it, you really have to go out of your way to find alternate ways of seeing the world.
So I thought Iād share some things Iāve come across recently that have opened my eyes in one way or another.
I am loving the hilarious, bawdy, heartbreaking story of Tanqueray, an aging burlesque dancer, that is currently unfolding over at Humans of New York. Itās wonderfully reflective of the incredible twists and turns that can happen in a human life. Hereās the first in the series:
I just discovered the blogger and illustrator Tanmay Vora, who writes about learning and leadership. I liked these two drawings.
āThe map of reality is not reality. Even the best maps are imperfect. Thatās because they are reductions of what they represent. If a map were to represent the territory with perfect fidelity, it would no longer be a reduction and thus would no longer be useful to us. A map can also be a snapshot of a point in time, representing something that no longer exists.ā
Iām slowly making my way through Shane Parrishās Great Mental Models project on the Farnam Street blog, which is dedicated to exploring alternate ways of seeing the world that can expand your perspective. The above quote is from one of the models he discusses, The Map is Not the Territory.
If you really want to have your mind blown, take 11 minutes and watch my Zen teacher Brad Warnerās video where he explains the Buddhist view of time, and the idea that action creates the conditions for itself to happen.
Stumbled across this on Twitter.
āI think about how growing old gracefully really means either disappearing or sticking around but always lying straight to peopleās faces about the strength of your feelings and desires. Aging gracefully means proving, day in and day out, that you can take anything ā a private excoriation, a public beatdown, an endless trickle of negs, a quiet, continuous undermining, a slow erosion of your confidence, a sudden jolt to your system strong enough to make all of your illusions cave in on themselves. Growing old gracefully means you eat it and smile through closed lips. You pretend you didnāt hear a word, didnāt see a thing, are utterly in the dark, a gorgeous, silent vessel still built to hold the most merciless manās limited imagination.ā
Screw aging āgracefully.ā Hereās a powerful ode to aging however the fuck you want from perennial Tiny Revolutions favorite Heather Havrilesky.
Thatās all for me this week. If youāve seen something that challenged or changed your mind lately, do be a lamb and drop it in the comments.
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Sara
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