George Orwell on food

“A human being is primarily a bag for putting food into; the other functions and faculties may be more godlike, but in point of time they come afterwards. A man dies and is buried, and all his words and actions are forgotten, but the food he has eaten lives after him in the sound or rotten bones of his children. I think it could be plausibly argued that changes of diet are more important than changes of dynasty or even of religion….Yet it is curious how seldom the all-importance of food is recognized. You see statues everywhere to politicians, poets, bishops, but none to cooks or bacon-curers or market gardeners.”
― George Orwell, The Road to Wigan Pier

(Goodreads.com)

Tarot Card for January 27: The Seven of Cups

The Seven of Cups

The Lord of Debauch is a deceptive card and can bring in some difficult influences when it’s about. We will always be tempted to do things that we will later regret, and we will find ourselves weak-willed when it comes to choosing what we know is the right course of action.

For instance, we might be faced with some sort of sexual temptation. This kind of situation can arise whether or not we are committed to another person – a one-night stand can have as many complications for the single as it can for the person in a partnership. Such an offer, when marked by the Seven of Cups, is going to have consequences that far outweigh the pleasure that might be fleetingly gained.

And again, the Lord of Debauch might come up to indicate that we are placed in a situation where we can make easy money, or obtain things in an inappropriate and unethical fashion – though it would not cover actual theft. But, for example, buying stolen property, or engaging in trickery to obtain money and possessions would come up here.

We might find ourselves showered with apparently great opportunities and have no idea which of them is valid and which is not – then we become children gazing in wonder at the treasure chest of jewels and wondering which one to take first! Perhaps the answer is that if we don’t know what to choose, we should consider leaving them all alone!!

And finally, the most serious influence that can be indicated by this card is the challenge to our ethical code. We may be faced with something that goes against our principles, and yet still be tempted to take advantage of it, or to do something that we will later think was sneaky, unkind, immoral and nasty.

The Seven of Cups is always indicative of a temptation which will cost much more than it gives, if we fall for it.

The Seven of Cups

(via angelpahts.com and Alan Blackman)

Ukraine Emergency Translation Group

Translation is a 5-step process of “straight thinking in the abstract.” The first step is an ontological statement of being beginning with the syllogism: “Truth is that which is so. That which is not truth is not so. Therefore Truth is all there is.” The second step is the sense testimony (what the senses tell us about anything). The third step is the argument between the absolute abstract nature of truth from the first step and the relative specific truth of experience from the second step. The fourth step is filtering out the conclusions you have arrived at in the third step. The fifth step is your overall conclusion.

We call it the Ukraine Emergency Translation Group but we welcome Translations about anything. Here are some sense testimonies (2nd step) and their corresponding conclusions (5th step) from this week.

2) Retirement
5) Retirement is the act of accepting security.

2) Knee surgery can be traumatic and painful, both physically and emotionally.
5) The handiwork of Truth is Love, all that’s real, tangible, physical OR All that’s real, tangible, physical is Love.

To submit your Translation, email zonta1111@aol.com and we will anonymously publish your sense testimony and conclusion.

For information about Translation or other Prosperos classes go to: https://www.theprosperos.org/teaching

Free Will Astrology: Week of January 26, 2023

JANUARY 24, 2023 AT 7:00 AM BY ROB BREZSNY (newcity.com)

Photo: Joyce McCown

ARIES (March 21-April 19): Noah Webster (1758–1843) worked for years to create the first definitive American dictionary. It became a cornucopia of revelation for poet Emily Dickinson (1830-1886). She said that for many years it was her “only companion.” One biographer wrote, “The dictionary was no mere reference book to her; she read it as a priest his breviary—over and over, page by page, with utter absorption.” Now would be a favorable time for you to get intimate with a comparable mother lode, Aries. I would love to see you find or identify a resource that will continually inspire you for the rest of 2023.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “The aspects of things that are most important for us are hidden because of their simplicity and familiarity.” So declared Taurus philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein in his book “Philosophical Investigations.” Luckily for you Tauruses, you have a natural knack for making sure that important things don’t get buried or neglected, no matter how simple and familiar they are. And you’ll be exceptionally skilled at this superpower during the next four weeks. I hope you will be gracious as you wield it to enhance the lives of everyone you care about. All of us non-Bulls will benefit from the nudges you offer as we make our course corrections.

GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Poet Carolyn Kizer said the main subject of her work was this: “You cannot meet someone for a moment, or even cast eyes on someone in the street, without changing.” I agree with her. The people we encounter and the influences they exert make it hard to stay fixed in our attitudes and behavior. And the people we know well have even more profound transformative effects. I encourage you to celebrate this truth in the coming weeks. Thrive on it. Be extra hungry for and appreciative of all the prods you get to transcend who you used to be and become who you need to be.

CANCER (June 21-July 22): If you have any interest in temporarily impersonating a Scorpio, the coming weeks will be a favorable time to play around. Encounters with good, spooky magic will be available. More easily than usual, you could enjoy altered states that tickle your soul with provocative insights. Are you curious about the mysteries of intense, almost obsessive passion? Have you wondered if there might be ways to deal creatively and constructively with your personal darkness? All these perks could be yours—and more. Here’s another exotic pleasure you may want to explore: that half-forbidden zone where dazzling heights overlap with the churning depths. You are hereby invited to tap into the erotic pleasures of spiritual experiments and the spiritual pleasures of erotic experiments.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The circle can and will be complete—if you’re willing to let it find its own way of completing itself. But I’m a bit worried that an outdated part of you may cling to the hope of a perfection that’s neither desirable nor possible. To that outdated part of you, I say this: Trust that the Future You will thrive on the seeming imperfections that arise. Trust that the imperfections will be like the lead that the Future You will alchemically transmute into gold. The completed circle can’t be and shouldn’t be immaculate and flawless.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Shakespeare’s work has been translated from his native English into many languages. But the books of Virgo detective novelist Agatha Christie have been translated far more than the Bard’s. (More info: tinyurl.com/ChristieTranslations.) Let’s make Christie your inspirational role model for the next four weeks. In my astrological estimation, you will have an extraordinary capacity to communicate with a wide variety of people. Your ability to serve as a mediator and go-between and translator will be at a peak. Use your superpower wisely and with glee!

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Libran musician Franz Liszt (1811-1886) was a prolific and influential genius who created and played music with deep feeling. He was also physically attractive and charismatic. When he performed, some people in the audience swooned and sighed loudly as they threw their clothes and jewelry on stage. But there was another side of Liszt. He was a generous and attentive teacher for hundreds of piano students, and always offered his lessons free of charge. He also served as a mentor and benefactor for many renowned composers, including Wagner, Chopin and Berlioz. I propose we make Liszt your inspirational role model for the next eleven months. May he rouse you to express yourself with flair and excellence, even as you shower your blessings on worthy recipients.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): This may risk being controversial, but in the coming weeks, I’m giving you cosmic authorization to engage in what might appear to be cultural appropriation. Blame it on the planets! They are telling me that to expand your mind and heart in just the right ways, you should seek inspiration and teaching from an array of cultures and traditions. So I encourage you to listen to West African music and read Chinese poetry in translation and gaze at the art of Indigenous Australians. Sing Kabbalistic songs and say Lakota prayers and intone Buddhist chants. These are just suggestions. I will leave it to your imagination as you absorb a host of fascinating influences that amaze and delight and educate you.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “All the world’s a stage,” Shakespeare wrote, “and all the men and women merely players.” That’s always true, but it will be even more intensely accurate for you in the coming weeks. High-level pretending and performing will be happening. The plot twists may revolve around clandestine machinations and secret agendas. It will be vital for you to listen for what people are NOT saying as well as the hidden and symbolic meanings behind what they are saying. But beyond all those cautionary reminders, I predict the stories you witness and are part of will often be interesting and fun.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In this horoscope, I offer you wisdom from Capricorn storyteller Michael Meade. It’s a rousing meditation for you in the coming months. Here’s Meade: “The genius inside a person wants activity. It’s connected to the stars; it wants to burn and it wants to create and it has gifts to give. That is the nature of inner genius.” For your homework, Capricorn, write a page of ideas about what your genius consists of. Throughout 2023, I believe you will express your unique talents and blessings and gifts more than you ever have before.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Greek writer Nikos Kazantzakis (1883–1957) was nominated nine times for the prestigious Nobel Prize in Literature, but never won. He almost broke through in the last year of his life, but French author Albert Camus beat him by one vote. Camus said Kazantzakis was “a hundred times more” deserving of the award than himself. I will make a wild prediction about you in the coming months, Aquarius. If there has been anything about your destiny that resembles Kazantzakis’, chances are good that it will finally shift. Are you ready to embrace the gratification and responsibility of prime appreciation?

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Piscean educator Parker Palmer has a crucial message for you to meditate on in the coming weeks. Read it tenderly, please. Make it your homing signal. He said, “Solitude does not necessarily mean living apart from others; rather, it means never living apart from one’s self. It is not about the absence of other people—it is about being fully present to ourselves, whether or not we are with others. Community does not necessarily mean living face-to-face with others; rather, it means never losing the awareness that we are connected to each other.”

Homework: What is the best, most healing lie you could tell? Newsletter.FreeWillAstrology.com

Word-Built World: Lagom

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lagom (pronounced [ˈlɑ̂ːɡɔm]LAW-gom) is a Swedish word meaning “just the right amount” or “not too much, not too little”.

The word can be variously translated as “in moderation“, “in balance”, “perfect-simple”, “just enough”, “ideal” and “suitable” (in matter of amounts). Whereas words like sufficient and average suggest some degree of abstinence, scarcity, or failure, lagom carries the connotation of appropriateness, although not necessarily perfection. The archetypical Swedish proverb “Lagom är bäst“, literally “The right amount is best”, is also translated as “Enough is as good as a feast”,[1] or as “There is virtue in moderation”.[2]

Etymology

The origin of the term is an archaic dative plural form of lag (“law”), in this case referring not necessarily to judicial law but common sense law. Literally meaning “according to law”, a more close translation would be “according to custom” or “according to common sense”.[3] The earliest attestations of the word are from 17th century texts.[4]

A common false etymology claims that it is a contraction of “laget om” (“around the team”); according to this myth, the phrase was used in Viking times to specify how much mead one should drink from the horn as it was passed around in order for everyone to receive a fair share.[3]

Use

Lagom is most often used as an adverb, as in the sentence “Han är lagom lång” (literally “He is just the right height”). Lagom can also be used as an adjective: “Klänningen var lagom för henne” (literally “The dress was just right for her”), which would be equivalent to “The dress fits her”. The adjective form is never inflected.

Cultural significance

The value of “just enough” can be compared to the idiom “less is more”, or contrasted to the value of “more is better”. It is viewed favorably as a sustainable alternative to the hoarding extremes of consumerism: “Why do I need more than two? Det är [It is] lagom[5] It can also be viewed as repressive: “You’re not supposed to be too good, or too rich”.[6]

In a single word, lagom is said to describe the basis of the Swedish national psyche, one of consensus and equality. “My aunt used to hold out her closed fist and say, “How much can you get in this hand? It’s much easier to get something in this [open] hand”.[7]

Comparable terms in other languages

The word “lagom” also exists in Norwegian, in both Bokmål and Nynorsk. The connotations in Norwegian, however, are somewhat different from Swedish. In Norwegian the word has synonyms as “fitting, suitable, comfortable, nice, decent, well built/proportioned”. While some synonyms are somewhat similar in meaning (e.g. “suitable” and “reasonable”, “fitting” and “in balance”), many present in Swedish do not exist in Norwegian and vice versa. The Norwegian words “passelig” and the more common “passe” are very similar, translating roughly as “fitting, adequate, suitable” in English. “Passe” can be used in every context where the Swedish “lagom” is used, e.g. “passe varm” (right temperature/adequately warm), “passe stor” (right size), etc.

Finnish has the word “Sopivasti”, which carries similar connotations of “just right”.

The concept of lagom is similar to Russian expression normal’no (нормально, literally normally), which indicates a sufficient and sustainable state, for example of one’s livelihood. In Russian, the word is often used as answer to the question “how are you”. Comparable terms are found in some south Slavic languages, for example Serbo-Croatian umereno or umjereno.

Ιn ancient Greek, there was the famous phrase of Cleobulusmetron ariston (μέτρον ἄριστον), meaning “moderation [literally: measure] is best”.

In Albanian there is the same use of word “taman”. The word “taman” derives from Ottoman Turkish “tamam” meaning “precisely”, borrowed from Arabic where it means “complete”, “perfect”. In Albanian is used pretty much the same as “lagom”, as in “a taman amount”, “not a taman person” (not a normal person), “taman!” (agreed, OK), etc. This word (“taman”) is also used in some Slavic languages (South Slavic) and it almost perfectly translates “lagom” to those languages.

In Thai, the word พอเพียง (phor phiang) portrays similar meaning.[8]

In Indonesia, both Indonesian and Javanese, there is a common word for that, pas, which means right amount (countable measurement), match, enough.[9]

In Swiss German dialects exists, similar to lagom, the word “gäbig”, which in German means something like “comfortable”, “suitable”, “handy”, in the case of objects or in relation to people and conditions “affable”, “pleasant”, “sympathetic”.

More at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lagom

Quiz: God, Or The Internet?

Slackjaw

Published in

Slackjaw

Ian Bardenstein

Ian Bardenstein

Jan 13, 2023 (medium.com)

Quiz: God, Or The Internet?

Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay
  1. Tracks your every move and location
  2. Probably collecting data on you right now
  3. Encourages daily worship — ideally, multiple times a day
  4. You aren’t always sure what to say to it
  5. Works in mysterious ways
  6. Billions of people sing its praises
  7. You know at least one person who wants nothing to do…