"In our Western tradition we have this notion of humility as a kind of softness or weakness, but it’s more like elasticity. Stephen Hawking refers to genius as “radical humility,” for only when one truly and deeply does not know is one open to what is possible. I always think of James Joyce: “I go to encounter for the millionth time the reality of experience.” Joyce is not championing a high-minded ideal, or an idea at all. He simply sets out to enter the fray, naked, without an agenda. If it takes James Joyce a million times, how many does it take the rest of us?" - Ran Ortner, an interview in The Sun

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  1. Who the Meek Are Not

    Not the bristle-bearded Igors bent
    under burlap sacks, not peasants knee-deep
    in the rice paddy muck,
    nor the serfs whose quarter-moon sickles
    make the wheat fall in waves
    they don't get to eat. My friend the Franciscan
    nun says we misread
    that word meek in the Bible verse that blesses them.
    To understand the meek
    (she says) picture a great stallion at full gallop
    in a meadow, who —
    at his master's voice — seizes up to a stunned
    but instant halt.
    So with the strain of holding that great power
    in check, the muscles
    along the arched neck keep eddying,
    and only the velvet ears
    prick forward, awaiting the next order.

    --Mary Karr

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  2. Two very interesting definitions of humility.

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