
Boston Marathon




“As a human being I have faults, you have faults, we all have faults. Even a great movie has faults. I think a great movie should have personality. And personality means that there are flaws, and you don’t have to correct the flaws. When you correct the flaws you’re eliminating personality. The Greek word for tragic flaw actually means, in Greek, defining characteristic. So the thing which makes the character is the thing which makes the flaw. Charlie Kaufman’s movies are highly admired and yet if you analyze them almost all of them have some problem in the third act, things that don’t really work—but they’re part of the fabric. And if you were to clean it up entirely maybe the whole thing won’t work as well…Every script, every movie has a certain DNA, and things which seem illogical may work…Because movies have gotten so expensive, executives feel more fear. And that fear rules. And that fear forces executives to make your screenplay perfect. Perfection is the enemy of art. It’s the enemy of character. It’s the enemy of anything that’s dynamic and interesting.”
Nick Kazan

I can never read all the books I want; I can never be all the people I want and live all the lives I want. I can never train myself in all the skills I want. And why do I want? I want to live and feel all the shades, tones and variations of mental and physical experience possible in my life. And I am horribly limited.
Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath
Besides the many things (portable transistor radios, street football, running through backyard sprinklers) that occupied our time together in summer, us boys never missed an opportunity to convert an empty refrigerator box into a “fort.” If such a box was left on the sidewalk, we quickly snatched it up and using our imagination and duct tape made it into a fortress–as we appointed ourselves soldiers. And then we each begged our mothers for permission to sleep overnight in them. “Thank you, Sir, I mean Mom.” With permissions granted, we planted the box (fort) in a friend’s backyard, as we cut off the top of it so we could see the stars at night–and sleep under them too. One boy’s family had rigged up a walkie-talkie so us soldiers could always reach ‘headquarters’ which was only 50 feet away in one of the parent’s bedrooms. Ah, the simple pleasures of youth.

“Narrative, in short. is more than literature, it is the way we understand our lives. If literature merely supplied entertainment, then it wouldn’t be as important as it is. Great literature speaks to the deepest level of our humanity; it helps us better understand who we are. Narrative is not only the way we understand our personal and collective identities, but also the source of our ethics, our politics, and our religion. It is older than theoretic culture and remains to this day an indispensable way of relating to the world.”
― Robert N. Bellah, Religion in Human Evolution: From the Paleolithic to the Axial Age
“Tell your story.
Shout it. Write it.
Whisper it if you have to.
But tell it.
Some won’t understand it.
Some will outright reject it.
But many will
thank you for it.
And then the most
magical thing will happen.
One by one, voices will start
whispering, ‘Me, too.’
And your tribe will gather.
And you will never
feel alone again.”
― L.R. Knost