Happy New Year
One of the curiosities of New Year's Resolutions is the unspoken belief that new and better ideas are always coming to the fore. I hope that is true but my advice is always a hash of old suggestions:
Seek fulfillment. Emphasize safety.
The great Old and New Testament sin is pride, the great sin of the doomed Greek was anger. These geniuses were not kidding.
Do not go out of the house in your pajamas.
Spend less than you earn.
There are better ways to do military-type lifts that pressure bones and joints but no good reason to do them at all.
Keep boundaries. Always reassess them.
One thing at a time. Multitasking has been shown to be terribly inefficient.
Do not be on time, be early.
Never use the phone at social events, dinner, or in the car.
Keep up-to-date phone numbers and addresses of friends. Use them. Keep up with old friends with a line or e-mail; do not allow them to slip away.
Get seven hours of sleep a day.
The time before and after exercise is very important. Warm-up and cool down.
People will not remember presents but they will remember how you made them feel.
Ours is a period of downgrading. Start a mild upgrade with more effort on appearance. Maybe it will catch on.
First dates should always be coffee or lunch.
Do not read anything other than menus while eating a meal with others.
Sign all petitions and always vote "no."
Build a good wardrobe, one good piece at a time.
Do not put ice in wine. If the wine is not cool enough, go to a better place.
Angry people are usually entertaining but avoid them after 6 o'clock.
Read a formal literary effort, a book, or essay, or play, a little bit every day.
Wake up. Early. The day will be nice and long and full of opportunities.
Go to bed at a reasonable time. Anything that happens late at night is because the perpetrators think no one is watching.
Do not name your children after large cities in Texas. Or European cheeses.
If you are going to drink alcohol, drink only good alcohol. Never drink something because it is there.
Never drink alcohol because you "don't want to waste it."
Never forget, alcohol is a neurotoxin.
Memorize one insightful quote or poetry line every week.
Have your teeth cleaned every six months.
Make a budget. The discipline alone is helpful.
When traveling:
Always, always get the harbormaster's number when you leave a ship.
Palace Walk by Malfous (the trilogy got him the Nobel Prize) is a real challenge, almost an immersion in an alternative universe. It's the first of the trilogy around WWI in Egypt and centers on a Muslim family ruled by a conservative autocrat. Very good. I did not like Philip Larkin. Hayek's Fatal Conceit is a good introduction to him. My project for the year was Paradise Lost. (Was on the Index.) The problem is that it is so profound and demanding that it can not be read once and fully enjoyed. Still, a wonderful project if you can put the time aside. (And some references will help.) I did not think the Devil was the most interesting, I thought Eve was. And I've started to reread, at Chris's suggestion, Fire and Ice, just to understand how Martin makes it so readable.
So every man, regardless of station or circumstance, wealth or heritage, birthright or appearance, sickness or health is equal in the eyes of God. There have been a lot of notions--from nihilism to castes, from divine right to class conflict, from Freud to Malthus--that have come down the pike since the beginning of recorded time but has there ever been a more radical, more hopeful, more optimistic idea than that? And could there be a better thought to start the new year?
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