My neighbor, a young mother, walking around the block with her dog or by herself, staring at her phone

Me: Come on, friend! See the trees leafing out! Listen to the birds!

Same neighbor, walking around the block this afternoon, staring at a book in her hands

Me: You go, girl!!

260405 JH Easter-Baptism 06-scaled.jpg.

It would be difficult to overstress how much Jimmy Dorrell has meant, and will continue to mean, to Waco. May the Lord bless Jimmy in his retirement โ€” though I doubt that heโ€™ll be very retiring.ย 

macwright.com:

I've been reading too much on Instapaper. Saving articles for later is a powerful way to manage my time, but it produces a huge pile of content that I then feel obligated to work my way through.ย 

Instapaper has the opposite effect on me. I save many articles there, and when I visit the site the first thing I do is delete the articles I am no longer interested in reading. Usually thatโ€™s more than half of the articles Iโ€™ve saved. (โ€œWhy did I think I wanted to read that?โ€) Very liberating. The key is not to visit Instapaper too often โ€” twice a week is about right.ย 

Abandoned reading: The Matter With Things: Our Brains, Our Delusions and the Unmaking of the World by Iain McGilchrist. What an infuriating endeavor. McGilchrist seems to think that he he makes a claim stronger by giving, not three, not five, but forty-seven supportive examples โ€” and that he canโ€™t say what he wants to say about the hemispheres of the brain without pausing to articulate a Theory of Truth. I began as an exceptionally sympathetic reader and now want to throw these volumes as far from me as possible. ๐Ÿ“š

I've had a number of people ask me about this: A 12-Month Immersive Course in Humanities - by Ted Gioia. Iโ€™ll just say that my version would be, not 52 assignments in a year, but one assignment in a year. Pick one vital book and read it slowly. Pause to think. Re-read difficult passages. Take your time, and be willing to set it aside for a while. And remember what Auden said: โ€œWhen one thinks of the attention that a great poem demands, there is something frivolous about the notion of spending every day with one. Masterpieces should be kept for High Holidays of the Spirit.โ€ย 

And from six years ago, on my old Buttondown newsletter: Easter with Arcabas.

Tech CEO asks
Chatbot why it is frozen.
Chatbot: โ€œYouโ€™re frozen.โ€

The other day I wrote, โ€œChatbotsโ€™ brains donโ€™t have a right hemisphere.โ€ Several people โ€” surprisingly many โ€” have asked me to expand on that. But I dunno: expanding on it feels like a very left-hemisphere thing to do.ย 

My advice for the new Archbishop of Canterbury | Rowan Williams:ย 

It might sound odd to approach Easter thinking about fear. But itโ€™s striking that the earliest gospel finishes by telling us that the women who came to the tomb of Jesus and found it empty initially โ€˜said nothing because they were afraidโ€™. Nothing is going to be the same again: being afraid is the most natural reaction. We are all on the back foot: the โ€˜cultural Christianโ€™, who likes to have a little bit of Christian decor in the house; the Christian nationalist, who wants non-Christians to know their place; the liberal Anglican, who wants everyone to feel comfortably at home. If what is said to Mary and what is done on Easter Day are indeed world-changing matters, we do well to be apprehensive. Only then can we begin to see just what we are to be thankful for. Release. Transformation.ย