All articles from The Marginalian
Kiss: Ellen Bass's Stunning Ode to the Courage of Tenderness as an Antidote to Helplessness
There is no greater remedy for helplessness than helping someone else, no greater salve for sorrow than according gladness to another. What makes life livable despite the cruelties of chance — the accident, the wildfire, the random intracellular mutation — are these little acts of mercy, of tenderne
How to Be a Happier Creature
It must be encoded there, in the childhood memories of our synapses and our cells — how we came out of the ocean 35 trillion yesterdays ago, small and slippery, gills trembling with the shock of air, fins budding feet, limbs growing sinewy and furred, then unfurred, spine unfurling beneath the bone
The Paradox of Knowing Who You Are and What You Want: Cristina Campo on Fairy Tales, Time, and the Meaning of Maturity
"If you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairy tales," Einstein reportedly told one mother who wished for her son to become a scientist. "If you want them to be very intelligent, read them more fairy tales." Given that the deepest measure of intelligence is a plasticity of being that
Blink Twice to Quell a Quasar: Carl Sagan on Superstition
Growing up in Bulgaria, in a city teeming in stray dogs and cars, I was deeply distressed by the sight of each dead animal in the streets between home and school — deaths I could not prevent and could not bear. To cope with the aching helplessness, I developed a private superstition: If I touched ea
HOLD ON LET GO: Urns for Living and the Art of Trusting Time
Ceramics came into my life the way the bird divinations had a year earlier — suddenly, mysteriously, as a coping mechanism for the confusions and cataclysms of living. I was reeling from a shattering collision with one of life's most banal and brutal truths — that broken people break people — and I