The Return – the Quest continues

Pikes Peak

After a glorious week smushed together in an old log cabin without running water and an outhouse on the slopes of Pikes Peak Colorado, we have returned.  It was wonderful family time – hiking, kayaking, playing, reading, climbing and performing the necessary tasks of cabin-living.  Irreplacable.  One of our sons was reading “How to Read Literature like a Professor” for his summer reading assignments in the wee hours and pointed out that this type of vacation shared many qualifications of the Quest in literary themes.  That feels so right.  Life lived in relation to others always seems a quest – to know one another better, love one another better, hear one another better, express and differentiate and develop as persons-in-relation.  I have been immensely blessed with a mixed and quirky collective of children from whom I learn so much, and a spouse who cracks and opens me.  It is a particular pleasure when the world around us is also so splendid and obviously large as it is in the Rockies of Colorado, and when so many distractions are replaced with shared attentions – mushrooms, critters, rock formations, streams, decrepit mines, wild donkeys, and so on.  Priceless time.

Upon return it is easy to see how the quest goes on…kiddos heading back to school…classes starting again…and these packages opened in the pile of mail:

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the quest always beginning…

2 thoughts on “The Return – the Quest continues

  1. My copy of Latours new book is on its way! I really hope he will present a thorough philosophical inquiry. Because even though I like his basic ideas presented in We Have Never Been Modern and later works, I often feel like he hasn’t gone enough into depth. He might still be a bit too much of an anthropologist instead of a philosopher… Anyway, you’ve a nice “pile of mail.”

  2. I am about a 1/3 of the way into it. He is certainly anthropologically driven, engaging schemata it seems for comprehending human life. I appreciate his insights and impetus. It strikes me as a structural map for inquiry.

"A word is a bridge thrown between myself and an other - a territory shared by both" - M. Bakhtin

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