asher553: (Default)
LIFE. My Hebrew birthday, 5 Shvat, fell last Friday, and on the civil calendar it's tomorrow: I'm turning 60 years old. This means that, even by the most optimistic estimates, I have already lived at least half the time allotted to me in this world. I find this fact a little sobering, but by no means depressing; rather, I feel energized. ("Concentrates the mind" and all that.)

HOUSING. The now-former roommate has cleared out the last of her belongings, and I now have the place - and the rent payment - all to myself. I've had a couple of responses to my posting that haven't quite worked out for one reason or another; here's hoping the coming week will bring success.

SCRIPTURE. In these troubled and uncertain times, I've found it helpful to renew my commitment to studying the Bible. This week's Torah reading includes the climactic moments of the Exodus from Egypt, with the pillar of fire and of smoke and the splitting of the sea. We've had pandemics, bugs in our food, blood diseases, and the destruction of livestock, crops, and progeny ... it all sounds eerily familiar.

In the broader Hebrew Scriptures, the 929 Project covers I Samuel 24, where King Saul takes a rest break in a cave, unknowingly coming within striking distance of David and his men who are hiding there. What I love about the Saul / David narrative is how carefully David walks the moral tightrope of asserting his claim against a monarch who has lost the mandate of Heaven - yet still respecting the person of Saul, and the office, and the nation, and ultimately G-d.

On the 929 web portal, the Spanish-language lesson (by Salomon Michan Mercado) following the English reading points to the inscription on men's restrooms - 'caballeros' - as a reminder that like a knight holding the reins of his horse, the human soul has the power to control our animal instincts.

Anyway, I'm going to grab the reins of my life and move ahead ... or go back to tilting at windmills, as the case may be.

LINKS
https://www.929.org.il/lang/en/today
https://soundcloud.com/929-bible/JPS_Audio_Bible_I_Samuel_Chapter_24_read_by_Jonathan_Roumie
https://soundcloud.com/salomon-michan/quien-lleva-las-riendas-en-tu
asher553: (Default)
As a young person, 'Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius' captivated me because I found the Middle Earth -like quality of the imagined world enchanting. In maturity, and having lived through (and still living through) many of the exact processes Borges is describing, I now understand why he conceived it as a horror story.
asher553: (asher63)
Looking back over my LJ archives, it looks like December 2005 was a pretty active month for me. I posted some bits of original fiction, an excerpt from Ursula K. LeGuin, and reflections on my new living quarters and old housewares.

And I still love this song by Electrelane, a musical setting of Juan Boscán's poem '¡Oh Sombra!' and which my brain still hears as "awesome bra":
asher553: (asher63)
I am so in love with this song.
asher553: (asher63)
is named Morrison, and doesn't wear leather pants.

Reminds me a bit of Hope Sandoval of Mazzy Star.
And she's not bad looking.
asher553: (asher63)
Como aquel que en soñar gusto recibe,
su gusto procediendo de locura,
así el imaginar con su figuravanamente su gozo en mí concibe.
Otro bien en mí, triste, no se escribe,
si no es aquel que en mi pensar procura;
de cuanto ha sido hecho en mi ventura
lo sólo imaginado es lo que vive.
Teme mi corazón de ir adelante,
viendo estar su dolor puesto en celada;
y así revuelve atrás en un instante
a contemplar su gloria ya pasada.
¡Oh sombra de remedio inconstante,
ser en mí lo mejor lo que no es nada!

Oh sombra, oh sombra ...

- Juan Boscán (c.1490 - 1542)
[as sung by Electrelane]

May 2025

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