Reflections on Paolo Bacigalupi's "Navola"
Some reflections on the fiction of Paulo Bacigalupi
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I am a writer and builder. My work embodies the tensions of our time. How do live relentlessly as human in a dehumanizing age? What does it mean to live well in a complex world? How can we reclaim the hope and imagination to build a better future?
Some reflections on the fiction of Paulo Bacigalupi
Read essay →
I have been here before: yearning to remain on vacation forever, but feeling the inevitability of return, gathering on the horizon like a change in the weather.
Maybe that is today's task, I think: to battle this demon, to face something in myself even harder than the mountain.
Now I find myself contemplating what it means to intentionally depart a place. The easy thing would be to simply jump in the van and leave. I want better than that; I want a departure that both honors this place and safeguards it in my memory.
Day after day, this trip reminds me: take nothing for granted. Experience everything. There is so much life to be had.
It was such a simple but deeply countercultural ritual, taking so much time to truly arrive in a place.
I needed to decisively commit to an ending before I could reap the benefits of a new beginning. Once I took that step, things fell into place quickly.
A well-lived life thus entails hard inner work on two fronts: training ourselves to live more fully in the present, and becoming better custodians of our own past.
Even here, on a timeful vacation, Hannah and I must make choices about the life we want, the way we want to be in the world.
Reflections on building and human flourishing in a complex technological world.