I just read Eat, Pray, Love for our book club and I really enjoyed it. I liked the format, I liked the writing, and there was a lot of food for thought. I knew I had to get some of my favorite passages down here, lest I forget them immediately.
While on a road trip with a friend, the author mentions that she wishes she could write a petition to God. Her friend encourages her to do just that. So she pulls out a notebook and write down a most humble request -- what she really, really wants. She reads it to her friend, who nods her approval.
"I would sign that," she said.I just love this idea. It was such an incredibly supportive thing for her friend to come up with. Brilliant, really. And when you think about it, we surrounded by this kind of collective goodwill, we just have to remember that fact.
I handed the petition over to her with a pen, but she was too busy driving, so she said, "No, let's say that I did just sign it. I signed it in my heart."
"Thank you, Iva. I appreciate your support."
"Now, who else would sign it?" she asked.
"My family. My mother and father. My sister."
"OK," she said. "They just did. Consider their names added. . . They're on the list now. Who else would sign it? Start naming names. . . Listen, Liz -- anybody can sign this petition. Do you understand that? Call on anyone, living or dead, and start collecting signatures."
The names spilled from me. They didn't stop spilling for almost an hour, as we drove across Kansas and my petition for peace stretched into page after invisible page of supporters. Iva kept confirming -- yes, he signed it, yes, she signed it -- and I became filled with a grand sense of protection, surrounded by the collective goodwill of so many mighty souls.
On being in Italy:
It's kind of a fairyland of language for me here. For someone who has always wanted to speak Italian, what could be better than Rome? It's like somebody invented a city just to suit my specifications, where everyone (even the children, even the taxi drivers, even the actors on the commercials!) speaks this magical language. It's like the whole society is conspiring to teach me Italian. They'll even print their newspapers in Italian while I'm here; they don't mind!In this and other passages, she really captures the joy of learning a new language -- the way it feels like a whole new world is opening up to you. And I totally remember feeling amazed at the way little children spoke French!
I love the way she personifies depression and loneliness here:
Depression and Loneliness track me down after about ten days in Italy. . . I stop to lean against a balustrade and watch the sunset, and I get to thinking a little too much, and then my thinking turns to brooding, and that's when they catch up with me.She obviously knows them well.
They come upon me all silent and menacing like Pinkerton Detectives, and they flank me -- Depression on my left, Loneliness on my right. They don't need to show their badges. I know these guys very well. We've been playing a cat-and-mouse game for years now. . . Then they frisk me. They empty my pockets of any joy I had been carrying there. Depression even confiscates my identity; but he always does that. Then Loneliness starts interrogating me, which I dread because it always goes on for hours. He's polite but relentless, and he always trips me up eventually. He asks if I have any reason to be happy that I know of.
I don't want to let them up the stairs to my apartment, either, but I know Depression, and he's got a billy club, so there's no stopping him from coming in if he decides that he wants to. . . Loneliness watches and sighs, then climbs into my bed and pulls the covers over himself, fully dressed, shoes and all. He's going to make me sleep with him again tonight, I just know it.
I found the following idea just brilliant:
I . . . reach for my most private notebook, which I keep next to my bed in case I'm ever in emergency trouble. I open it up. I find the first blank page. I write:I need to try that!
"I need your help."
Then I wait. After a little while, a response comes, in my own handwriting:
I'm right here. What can I do for you?
And here recommences my strangest and most secret conversation. Here, in this most private notebook, is where I talk to myself. . . I've found that voice in times of code-orange distress, and have learned that the best way for me to reach it is written conversation. . . Even during the worst of suffering, that calm, compassionate, affectionate and infinitely wise voice (who is maybe me, or maybe not exactly me) is always available for a conversation on paper at any time of day or night. . . This is what I find myself writing to myself on the page:
I'm here. I love you. . . There's nothing you can ever do to lose my love. . . I am stronger than Depression and I am braver than Loneliness and nothing will ever exhaust me.
. . . I find myself writing this comforting reminder at the bottom of the page:
Never forget that once upon a time, in an unguarded moment, you recognized yourself as a friend.
In the morning when I wake up, I can still smell a faint trace of Depression's lingering smoke, but he himself is nowhere to be seen. Somewhere during the night, he got up and left. And his buddy Loneliness beat it, too.
The next morning in meditation, all my caustic old hateful thoughts come up again. I'm starting to think of them as irritating telemarketers, always calling at the most inopportune moments. . . When I tried this morning, after an hour or so of unhappy thinking, to dip back into my meditation, I took a new idea with me: compassion. I asked my heart if it could please infuse my soul with a more generous perspective on my mind's workings.I've never really tried meditation, but I am all too familiar with negative thoughts, negative self-talk. How about having more compassion with myself? Now there's a novel idea!
You can use spiritual exercises to help you overcome [destructive thoughts]. It's a sacrifice to let them go, of course. It's a loss of old habits, comforting old grudges and familiar vignettes. Of course this all takes practice and effort. . . It's constant vigilance and I want to do it. . . I repeat this vow about 700 times a day: I will not harbor unhealthy thoughts anymore. . . That is my mission, and it will never end.
This is why I love books -- the recognition of familiar experience, the clever turns of phrase, the ideas they spark... and I am vowing to write more about books here. What are you reading now?
16 comments:
I'm reading that book right now- I love the writing style, but I'm not sure I love the book- yet.
I sure want to go to Italy!!!
I am adding Eat, Pray Love to my list of soon to reads(it's ever growing). I like her concept of collective goodwill--that's a comfort.
I am reading The Year of Jubilo now, it's about a man coming home from the Civil War and changes/effects of the war in his hometown and self.
I've had this one on my list for a while. Thanks for sharing some good passages. You have definitely piqued my interest now. Sounds good!
I loved this book. I felt like it was written for ME!
I have a bunch of work-related books going right now but that's about it.
I have been on the fence with this one- but now I think this just pushed me over to adding it to my list.
I am almost done with Love Is A Mix Tape- I think you would enjoy it. Finally reading Suite Francaise and liking it. Then there is Franny and Zooey by JD Salinger. Been reading that one for about a month now. Ugh.
Very thought provoking. You could write like that, you know.
Keep inspiring me. I love you.
I'm reading VEgetable, Animal, Mineral by Barbara Kingsolver--a must, loving it.
i loved EPL. It made me long for more time in Italy!!
You make a good 'argument' for this book. I haven't been interested at all but you gave a glimpse of why I might change my mind.
oh Michelle, you picked two of some of the passages I have enjoyed. It is amazing sometimes to me, how in the description of something all so familiar or not...it brings it to another level...another way of thinking of it. I am almost done with it...it has been wonderful.
I haven't posted about this book yet because I think it would mean retyping 1/2 the book. It's good that you could pick a sane amount of things to share.
We could all be kinder to ourselves. Negative self-talk is so sad to think about. If we say that kind of stuff to ourselves there is no safe place to be.
I love the passage about her emergency notebook. When I read it, I sort of imagined it as a written prayer--the way we can talk to Heavenly Father when we are in real need. None of the niceties that we usually stick into our prayers, just down to business. And the replies were like answers to prayers. They are there to comfort us and help us feel God's love. Thanks for sharing. It was a good book!
I love that you shared so many quotes...and some I could relate to so well. I've seen this book around but wasn't sure what it was all about.
Also just realized that I missed wishing you a happy birthday! I've been out of the loop for a few...hope you had a good one!
I enjoyed this book, as well. She ddid hit it right on, with her intimate friends loneliness and depression, and some phrases hit home.
Starting to read Wild Swans, here.
I really enjoyed this book, too and I am not one to read for mere pleasure (it's usually about mothering, or organzing, or spiritual). Good stuff, for sure!
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