Thinking Body, Dancing Mind

Three treasures I cherish:
The first is fathomless love,
The second is frugality,
The third is reluctance to lead.
From love comes courage,
From frugality generosity,
From reticence comes leadership.
To be daring without loving,
To be generous without care,
To be forward without reticence,
Leads to nothing but death.

too often the people complain that they have
done nothing with their
lives
and then they wait for somebody to tell them
that this isn’t so.
look, you’ve done this and that and you’ve
done that and that’s
something.
you really think so?
of course.

but
they had it right.
they’ve done nothing.
shown no courage.
no inventiveness.
they did what they were taught to
do.
they did what they were told to
do.
they had no resistance, no thoughts
of their own.
they were pushed and shoved
and went obediently.
they had no heart.
they were cowardly.
they stank in life.
they stank up life.

and now they want to be told that
they didn’t fail.
you’ve met them.
they’re everywhere.
the spiritless.
the dead-before-death gang.

be kind?
lie to them?
tell them what they want to hear?
tell them anything they want to hear?

people with courage made them what they aren’t.

and if they ask me, I’ll tell them what they
don’t want to hear.

it’s better you
keep them away from me, or
they’ll tell you I’m a cruel man.

it’s better that they confer
with you.

I want to be free of
that.

—Charles Bukowski (via finding-elysium)

(Source: cpassikoff, via finding-elysium)

Charlie Chaplin, final speech in ‘The Great Dictator.’

It is said that men fear death. In my experience, what men truly fear is the uncertainty of death. In all that ordeal, when death was certain, I was possessed by an unassailable calm I have never felt before or since. 

It was only when the hope of survival appeared that I felt the true grip of terror.

A foot in each world and his soul in the middle, the dying man sees all things.

—Nomad proverb

Self-pity is easily the most destructive of the nonpharmaceutical narcotics; it is addictive, gives momentary pleasure and separates the victim from reality.

…That’s what I’m hoping for in real life; I hope that whatever you are - Buddhist, Muslim, Christian - whatever you hold in your heart, I hope that’s what’s waiting for you. I swear to God, how great would that be? That’d be the greatest, man. If you believe that there’s a place where you can go and jam with Jimi Hendrix and have lunch with George Washington, I think that’s fucking great. I hope that that’s what it is, and I’m glad you made that connection.

—‘They Grey’ Director Joe Carnahan on Life, Death & That Controversial Ending.