
Everything is in order
except for the things you push along

Everything is in order
except for the things you push along

In my reflection the crooked lines
are straight
not because I want to
because they should
It's a matter of optics

I just want to sit down.

I love that we have trees besides the road
standing in a park all alone
or in a corner
looking at it all
because in the forest they are in their city
never alone but forgotten by all

That what once spilled over order
leaks down crossing all the lines
and dries
imagination

The night streets were dark
where I looked down
before crossing the empty street
and saw nature reflected
left undisturbed

We live in darkness
a modern cave
we believe
not the messenger
who speaks differently
another way
not from heaven
but from earth
When one travels around the world, one notices to what an extraordinary degree human nature is the same, whether in India or America, in Europe or Australia. This is especially true in colleges and universities. We are turning out, as if through a mold, a type of human being whose chief interest is to find security, to become somebody important, or to have a good time with as little thought as possible.
Conventional education makes independent thinking extremely difficult. Conformity leads to mediocrity. To be different from the group or to resist environment is not easy and is often risky as long as we worship success. The urge to be successful, which is the pursuit of reward whether in the material or in the so-called spiritual sphere, the search for inward or outward security, the desire for comfort—this whole process smothers discontent, puts an end to spontaneity and breeds fear; and fear blocks the intelligent understanding of life. With increasing age, dullness of mind and heart sets in.

One advantage of getting older is that you (can) realize that age doesn’t make you smarter. I have been carrying many of my self-proclaimed best ideas with me for 30 years now, and I have fine-tuned them a little here and there, and maybe see them clearer in a wider context, but they are basically the same ideas.
I am older now, but I have learned over the years that I know very little about many things and a little more about a few things. This knowledge that we don’t get smarter or have better ideas when we get older is something I also use when I look at people that I have admired, like Richard Dawkins, for instance. When I read his books and learned about what was written in them, I was still young, naive, and impressed. Naivety is something that slowly erodes, and though I am still impressed by most of his work, I am also disappointed. Over the years, I have learned that these writers are just like you and me, and the internet gave me the tools to easily find out what lives they live behind the façade I erected in front of them. They can have their opinions, of course, but it’s just a shame that with all the effort they put into their professional work, they say utter nonsense while the answers are easily accessible from their phones.
But now I know about his political views, which makes me sad. I long for the days that I could naively believe that a scholar who has produced such enlightened work could never simultaneously produce so much nonsense when they speak about things they know little about. It’s the Dunning-Kruger effect in full force. It’s what they say: never meet your idols, just keep reading their good books.
It’s just disappointment, and I fear I will unknowingly do the same…and that’s my first lie, it’s not fear, I know it.

It looked like they were drawn
scratch into the glass posing
as reflections
and though I could turn around
I was afraid to lose this view
too afraid of reality
of what was presented in
my fears
I had no choice
I had to choose

It's my dreams that make me feel
small
and I don’t talk about the ones that I wake up from
but the ones that feel real
while I am awake
and what’s my part
when I dream
do I want them
I just know
that sometimes
they tower over me
My dear friend:
I still cannot help thinking several times a day of the delightful pampering I had in Venice and of the still more delightful pamperer, and all I can say is that one cannot have such good times for long and that it is only right I should once more be an ancho rite and as such go walking for ten hours a day, drink fateful doses of water and await their effect. Mean while I burrow eagerly inside my moral mines and at times feel quite subterranean in the process — at pres ent I seem to feel as if I had now discovered the principal artery and outlet. But this is the sort of belief that may return a hundred times only to be rejected. Now and again an echo of Chopin’s music rings in my ears, and this much you have achieved, that at such moments I always think of you and lose myself in meditating about possibilities. My trust in you has grown very great; you are built much more soundly than I suspected, and apart from the evil influence that Herr Nietzsche has exercised over you from time to time, you are in every respect well conditioned. Ceterum censeo mountains and woods are better than towns and Paris is better than Vienna.

I will count all the nails while I wait for you to open the gate in this endless wooden wall that surrounds you and the wider world around the ground where you make your final stance and I hope to meet you and present the amount of nails the wait was with a hope it was all worth it.

The alarm bell is often clearly visible
I wonder why
it is important to know where the sound comes from
precisely

The damage is done from the inside
with a rhythm
one I can only feel resonating
a different note
every time
with no melody
to listen to
for you
outside

I don’t dare to get close to the window
it’s for what I don’t see inside
what makes me afraid
I keep staring
but now just at the window
a substitute
fascinating on its own
and I imagine
representing you
inside
Do I even have to come closer?

It was left behind
an unfinished story
you walked away from
and now
in your hindsight
you still don’t understand
where it was going
It gets left behind
an unfinished story
you walked away from
and now
…