I’ve been doing a lot of research on the jesters of antiquity and Medieval times. In the course of that reading, I’ve gotten to take a peak into different times and conditions under which human beings lived.
One hard truth that has struck me is how much worse things could be.
And here, I suppose I’m speaking in terms of our increasing political divide. Things seem bad right now. Some people believe we are on the precipice of a greater conflict. I certainly hope not.
Yet existence permits so much more than our culture norms usually allow. To be obnoxious at a party is a paltry offense compared to the cruelty of mankind. What history teachers us is that the world can be infinitely terrible if we allow it to be.
Consider this section from Suetonius’ The Twelve Caesars on the reign of Tiberius:
You’re a savvy, patriotic person, so I’m sure you’d heard of “gold star families” before the Democratic National Convention. If not, don’t feel ashamed. The memory of our fallen soldiers may always be in our hearts, but it isn’t always in our search history.
The graph below represents the popularity of the search term “gold star families” between January 1, 2004 and August 7, 2016. You probably know the cause of the second spike. But do you know the cause of the first?
Recent Posts
- Coming Soon…
- A Prayer for the Panther
- Meme Level 10
- “You Can Have Daughters and Accost Women without Remorse.”
- The Sun is a god. Isn’t that obvious?
- Worth Listening: Carl Jung’s “The Undiscovered Self”
- We’ve Got to Fulfill the Book
- No (Wo)Man is An Island
- Self-Reliance
- A City and A Tower
- Monday is no time for Rumination
- The Gas Line
- The Genius of an Age
- Replace the Word “God” with “Monday.”
- A Time for Garrison Keillor
Tags
advice aesthetics Animation Art Books Carl Jung Corpse Flower Covid-19 Descartes Donald Trump Facebook Fear Fiction Film food Hemingway Investing John Berger Johns Hopkins Jordan Peterson Literacy literary Literature New York Pennsylvania Philosophy Poetry Politics Psychology Publishing Reading Reddit Robert Frost Saul Zaentz Science Fiction Screenwriting Story SXSW Tao Te Ching Teaching techniques unwritten Virtual reality writing YouTube