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  • Hobbit Day thoughts

    It’s Hobbit Day, as all civilized Shirelings know. Specifically, it’s Bilbo and Frodo’s birthday, as well as the autumnal equinox. I recommend shepherd’s pie and persimmon pudding, which is how we celebrated yesterday. (Leftovers today!)

    This morning I’m listening to the Weird Studies episode about Conan the Barbarian, mostly in preparation for an upcoming post. Of all the wonderful Weird Studies episodes, by the way, that is one of my favorites, both because it was a fun topic and because it bring back memories of one of my road trips, travelling between Corydon and Leavenworth.

    In any case, J.F. says his favorite fantasy trope is where the characters live in a land with an evident but mostly forgotten ancient history. Hyboria and Middle Earth are similar in this way, he says.

    It got me thinking about Middle Earth as it stood during the events of Lord of the Rings, at the end of the Third Age. Everyone knew something was changing. Even in the Shire, protected by the Dunedain Rangers, the hobbits heard rumors of trouble. The wisest of Middle Earth’s folk, though they knew a great deal about both path and present, could not predict how events would play out. In fact, it was only known in retrospect that they were living through the final days of the Third Age.

    It’s always a good time to re-read LOTR–perhaps especially so now.

    → 3:27 PM, Sep 22
  • Tolkien:

    [Frodo] found himself wondering at times, especially in the autumn, about the wild lands, and strange visions of mountains that he had never seen came into his dreams.

    Especially in the autumn. What is it about autumn that stirs up that wanderlust? I also feel it every year.

    → 5:25 PM, Aug 10
  • It’s sometimes said that Tolkien had no “magical system” underlying LOTR. This post makes a good argument that there is one, albeit more subtle than most.

    → 7:18 AM, May 19
  • Lovers of Tolkien’s legendarium: the YouTube channel In Deep Geek is worth your time.

    → 9:10 AM, Mar 1
  • Lord of the Rings has obviously had a huge impact on me. I’ve mentioned before how the Litany Against Fear from Dune is a part of my life. Recently the line from Wheel of Time has been popping into my head regularly: “The wheel weaves as the wheel wills.”

    → 7:57 AM, Jul 30
  • “How Jung and Tolkien Tapped into the Collective Unconscious”

    → 7:15 AM, May 14
  • Tom Shippey’s marvelous exposition of Tolkien’s Ringwraiths.

    → 7:06 PM, Apr 10
  • Happy 132nd birthday, J.R.R. Tolkien!

    → 9:56 AM, Jan 3
  • Happy Hobbit Day! Unfortunately I won’t have as much time for celebrating today but I will certainly have this music playing in the background.

    → 7:43 AM, Sep 22
  • There has been some welcome talk here on micro.blog about practical actions people can take to reduce their contribution to climate change and our ongoing ecological disasters. There’s also, inevitably, been a lot of discussion about what “works,” whether it is wise to make demands on individuals when what we need is systemic change. And we most emphatically do need systemic change. Nothing I’m about to say should be interpreted as political quietism, though I won’t deny I’m pretty pessimistic in that regard.

    I would like to add this to the conversation: right behavior does not calculate. This is something that is found in many wisdom traditions, from the Bible to the Stoics to (all hail, Tolkien!) Lord of the Rings. Is there anything more stirring than a person who does the right thing, damn the consequences?

    I wonder if the spirit of calculation continues to assert itself in these conversations because climate change is consistently framed as a STEM problem by the technocrats. The whole discussion becomes one of a technological problem with technological solutions, rather than a moral failure that must be addressed by repentance and amendment of life followed by the establishment of right relationship with the more-than-human world.

    What sort of person do you want to be? What do you love? These are the questions that should drive our behavior with regard to climate change and other human damage to our planet. Do you want to contribute to that damage? How will your ancestors and descendants judge your actions?

    Now, I will not prescribe what “right action” will look like for you. I do things I wish more people would do—and I do things other people wish I wouldn’t do. I don’t know the circumstances of other people’s lives so I’m uninterested in judging. I can only say, as the torso of Apollo said to Rilke, you must change your life.

    Listen to your conscience. Do what you can—and maybe a little of what you think you can’t. Meet the challenges of your time in such a way that you can, like Théodon, stand among your ancestors without shame.

    → 10:29 AM, Jul 19
  • Tolkien, Lord of the Rings:

    “Bilbo used often to say there was only one Road; that it was like a great river: its springs were at every doorstep, and every path was its tributary. ‘It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out of your door,’ he used to say. ‘You step into the Road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there is no knowing where you might be swept off to.’”

    → 6:36 AM, Oct 4
  • Happy Equinox! Happy Hobbit Day!

    The Road goes ever on and on,
    Down from the door where it began.
    Now far ahead the Road has gone,
    And I must follow, if I can,
    Pursuing it with eager feet,
    Until it joins some larger way
    Where many paths and errands meet.
    And whither then? I cannot say.

    → 5:05 AM, Sep 22
  • Hobbit Day is tomorrow, September 22nd. Are you making your preparations?

    → 6:25 AM, Sep 21
  • Finished reading The Hobbit. It’s been a few years since the last time I read it. Now moving on to The Lord of the Rings.

    If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.

    → 8:34 AM, Sep 18
  • Hobbit Day is 33 days away

    By some curious chance one morning long ago in the quiet of the world, when there was less noise and more green, and the hobbits were still numerous and prosperous, and Bilbo Baggins was standing at his door after breakfast smoking an enormous long wooden pipe that reached nearly down to his woolly toes (neatly brushed) – Gandalf came by.

    Illustration by Maurice Sendak

    → 8:16 AM, Aug 20
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