Too much that we do is done at the expense of something else, or somebody else. There is some intransigent destructiveness in us. My days, though I think I know better, are filled with a thousand irritations, worries, regrets for what has happened and fear for what may, trivial duties, meaningless torments — as destructive of my life as if I wanted to be dead. Take today for what it is, I counsel myself. Let it be enough. And I dare not, for fear that if I do, yesterday will infect tomorrow. We are in the habit of contention — against the world, against each other, against ourselves. It is not from ourselves we will learn to be better than we are.
From A Native Hill, by Wendell Berry (1969)
credit: take-root
Notes
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