Well this is just wonderful, you've all made SUCH good points. Between the books 1001 points and then your own ideas, it's a rich buffet, it really is. I love to go off and think about your posts and the book points. I am so glad we're reading and discussing this. I feel as if I've had a course in gerontology which apparently I could have used way back when, so much explained here IF we agree with her reasoning.
Jonathan, what a quote. Why do you think they said good bye O Lord I'm going to America? I have a friend who told me when she came by ship to NYC for the first time (she was a young girl, I think she was 10 and alone) she wanted to turn around and go back. She had understood the streets were paved with gold and the wharves, the general area where the ships landed, the NYC ports back then (she's elderly) (I guess from Ellis Island but I am not sure) was so far from "streets of gold" she wanted to go back. But she's still here, and loving it.
Curses. The Romans did curse tablets all the time. The sacred fountains and rivers are full of them. They are very creative, too. Here's a wonderful site on them, I've put a link to the main page, but you can go deeper and they will actually show the curse tablet itself and then the translation:
http://curses.csad.ox.ac.uk/ " Cenacus complains to the god Mercury about Vitalinus and Natalinus his son concerning the draught animal which has been stolen from him, and asks the god Mercury that they may have neither health before/unless they return at once to me the draught animal which they have stolen, and to the god the devotion which he has demanded from them himself. "
On this site there's an explanation of this, called Cursing for Beginners. I think they are most creative to read. May the person who stole my chicken break out in wens, etc. Anybody could do one, it did not require a witch.
Bellamarie, I totally agree with your selection of humor. i laughed out loud, too at that passage, loved the " If I am sick I go to my son, the psychiatrist," said Faegl." There you are, the entire shtick in a nutshell. My son the psychiatrist. My son the doctor. My son the lawyer.
But I laughed out loud at this one, too: after Sonya tells how her mother put a spot of ashes on her face "So you shouldn't get no evil eye..." Moshe says, "maybe this is a reason I should be grateful for all the dark spots I get on my face from old age." hahhahahaaaaaaaaaaaaa What a hoot. LOVE it.
I knew they were good for something!
And golly the Evil Eye is certainly not confined to old Jewish custom, it's alive and well in Sicily and parts of Italy. And I wonder where else in 2017.
What an interesting article on Ells's philosophy, Barbara. I'm trying to recall where I have heard of him before and can't. This is interesting: "We are hardly born with specific thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. Nor does our environment directly make us act or feel. But, our genes and our social upbringing give us strong tendencies to do (and enjoy) what we do. Although we usually go along with (or indulge in) these tendencies, we do not exactly have to. We definitely do not. "
I think anger like a lot of other things, is a learned response. So many things, how to act, how to treat people, how to react, are learned as a child.
But ANGER as Jonathan says to solve problems, surely is destructive, isn't it? It elevates the BP, causes rapid flushes of adrenaline, and some people can't let it go and live with it as if it's another person, addressing everything TO it. Type A people are said to be angry.
But then I just read that cursing is actually good for you. Did you all see that? Maybe anger if expressed gets out the repressed what not. I can't believe that is true.
But the Center people clearly find it empowering, as Barbara said, " anger harnesses and expresses power. " And this is another great point, Barbara:
Thought about anger - you have to feel pretty safe to unleash anger - you do not usually show anger to strangers if for no other reason than not knowing how safe you would be if someone retaliated and so, that says to me that they each felt safe among the people in the Center regardless, how they judged each other since, they felts safe enough to show their anger .But on the other hand, the person who boils over and carries on shows a lack of self control, don't you think? He who doesn't lose his cool...what's the expression about the one who doesn't fall victim to his anger, he's in control? I can't remember it.
And there is hongfan!! All the way from Shanghai, we are truly international now! What an interesting fact about the translation of the Torah used by Christ, I did not know that.
A wonderful book on the history of the Bible is by Christopher de Hamel (the famous curator) called The Book: A History of the Bible. It's absolutely spectacular. What Jerome did takes one's breath away.
That's a great point about naming names, Bellamarie! That stood out for me, too. Oh you don't watch the KarTrashians, do you really?
Jonathan, The Chosen and My Name is Asher Lev were the BEST books when i read them as a youth, like The Fires of Spring (Michener: autobiographical) and Revolutionary Road, and A Tree Grows in Brooklyn and Marjorie Morningstar and Arrowsmith but I wonder if they have stood the test of time. Since you've got them, if you get a chance to read them, let us know?
I find myself, now old, wanting to reread Babbitt again. Lewis is dated, his speech is dated but I read it a few years ago, (I had always hated it) and found to my shock that it was REALLY good and there were, I think two sequels. Small town America. I probably need to read Our Town again, too, hated it with a passion. I wonder why now.