Value for Thursday of Week 09 in the season of Sowing

Longevity

People prefer life over death, unless other preferences are unfulfilled to such an extent that living is no longer preferable.

  • To sustain longevity, you have to evolve. [Aries Spears]
  • If you ask what is the single most important key to longevity, I would have to say it is avoiding worry, stress and tension. And if you didn’t ask me, I’d still have to say it. [George Burns]

Longevity encompasses all our preferences in the dimension of time. Often people say that they would not care to live to an unusually old age; yet generally when people reach an advanced age, they prefer to continue living. An exception is when an elderly person is ill, with little or no hope of improvement; but then, a younger person may wish to die under similar life circumstances.

Some people have continued to be productive and apparently happy to the age of 100 or more. They include composer Elliott Carter, songwriter Irving Berlin, pianist Mieczysław Horszowski, actor-producer-playwright-director-screenwriter George Abbott, actor Kirk Douglas, comedian George Burns, actor Norman Lloyd, actress Gloria Stuart, actress Ellen Albertini Dow, actress Connie Sawyer, actress Luise Rainer, author Beverly Cleary, evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr, artist Grandma Moses, and banker-philanthropist David Rockefeller.

Bump it down to age ninety, and we get a list that includes President John Adams, Red Cross founder Clara Barton, jazz pianist Eubie Blake, composer-conductor Pierre Boulez, author Ray Bradbury, journalist Ben Bradlee, jurist William Brennan, cellist Pablo Casals, painter Marc Chagall, culinary figure Julia Child, prime minister Winston Churchill, composer Aaron Copland, journalist and news anchor Walter Cronkite, surgeon Michael DeBakey, educator-philosopher John Dewey, civil rights activist W.E.B. DuBois, economist John Kenneth Galbraith, philosopher Thomas Hobbes, jurist Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., card-game icon Edmond Hoyle, social activist Mother Jones, anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela, painter Georgia O’Keefe, chemist Linus Pauling, painter-sculptor Pablo Picasso, pianist Arthur Rubinstein, philosopher Bertrand Russell, humanitarian Albert Schweitzer, folk singer Pete Seeger, playwright George Bernard Shaw, abolitionist Harriet Tubman, and architect Frank Lloyd Wright. Not all of us will live so long as these notable people, or accomplish so much, but may their examples guide and inspire us.

Real

True Narratives

Technical and Analytical Readings

On longevity:

On dealing with longevity:

Photographs

Documentary and Educational Films

Imaginary

Fictional Narratives

Novels:

Poetry

Spring and Summer, Fall and Winter and Spring, /After each other drifting, past my window drifting! /And I lay so many years watching them drift and counting /  The years till a terror came in my heart at times, / With the feeling that I had become eternal;  / at last My hundredth year was reached!  / And still I lay Hearing the tick of the clock, and the low of cattle / And the scream of a jay flying through falling leaves!  / Day after day alone in a room of the house / Of a daughter-in-law stricken with age and gray. / And by night, or looking out of the window by day My thought ran back, it seemed, through infinite time / To North Carolina and all my girlhood days, / And John, my John, away to the war with the British, / And all the children, the deaths, and all the sorrows. / And that stretch of years like a prairie in Illinois / Through which great figures passed like hurrying horsemen, / Washington, Jefferson, Jackson, Webster, Clay. / O beautiful young republic for whom my John and I / Gave all of our strength and love!  / And O my John!  / Why, when I lay so helpless in bed for years, / Praying for you to come, was your coming delayed? / Seeing that with a cry of rapture, like that I uttered  / When you found me in old Virginia after the war, / I cried when I beheld you there by the bed, / As the sun stood low in the west growing smaller and fainter / In the light of your face!

[Edgar Lee Masters, “Rebecca Wasson”, from Spoon River Anthology (1915).]

Music: Composers, artists, and major works

Josef Suk, Asrael, symphony for large orchestra in C Minor, Op. 27 (Symphony No. 2) (1906) (approx. 55-65’) (list of recorded performances), is an extended musical essay on life and death, in five movements: (1) the struggle between life and death; (2) loss; (3) a dance of life and a savage dance of death; (4) a musical portrait of the composer’s wife, who died shortly before the composition; and (5) “what is the point of living?” The work is titled after the angel of death in some versions of Western monotheism. Top recorded performances are conducted by Talich in 1952, Ančerl in 1967, Kubelik in 1981, Pešek in 1990, Bělohlávek in 1991, Mackerras in 2007 ***, Ashkenazy in 2008, Bělohlávek in 2008, and Bělohlávek in 2014. 

Music of composer Elliott Carter, who lived to the age of 103:

Albums:

Music: songs and other short pieces

Visual Arts

Film and Stage

This Is Our Story

A religion of values and Ethics, driven by love and compassion, informed by science and reason.

PART ONE: OUR STORY

First ingredient: Distinctions. What is the core and essence of being human? What is contentment, or kindliness, or Love? What is gentleness, or service, or enthusiasm, or courage? If you follow the links, you see at a glance what these concepts mean.

PART TWO: ANALYSIS

This site would be incomplete without an analytical framework. After you have digested a few of the examples, feel free to explore the ideas behind the model. I would be remiss if I did not give credit to my inspiration for this work: the Human Faith Project of Calvin Chatlos, M.D. His demonstration of a model for Human Faith began my exploration of this subject matter.

A RELIGION OF VALUES

A baby first begins to learn about the world by experiencing it. A room may be warm or cool. The baby learns that distinction. As a toddler, the child may strike her head with a rag doll, and see that it is soft; then strike her head with a wooden block, and see that it is hard. Love is a distinction: she loves me, or she doesn’t love me. This is true of every human value:

justice, humility, wisdom, courage . . . every single one of them.

This site is dedicated to exploring those distinctions. It is based on a model of values that you can read about on the “About” page. However, the best way to learn about what is in here is the same as the baby’s way of learning about the world: open the pages, and see what happens.

ants organic action machines

Octavio Ocampo, Forever Always

Jacek Yerka, House over the Waterfall

Norman Rockwell, Carefree Days Ahead

WHAT YOU WILL SEE HERE

When you open tiostest.wpengine.com, you will see a human value identified at the top of the page. The value changes daily. These values are designed to follow the seasons of the year.

You will also see an overview of the value, or subject for the day, and then two columns of materials.

The left-side column presents true narratives, which include biographies, memoirs, histories, documentary films and the like; and also technical and analytical writings.

The right-side columns presents the work of the human imagination: fictional novels and stories, music, visual art, poetry and fictional film.

Each entry is presented to help identify the value. Open some of the links and experience our human story, again. It belongs to us all, and each of us is a part of it.

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The Work on the Meditations