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Archive for December 1, 2022

The Queen of Basketball

This week’s inspiring video: The Queen of Basketball
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Video of the Week

Dec 01, 2022
The Queen of Basketball

The Queen of Basketball

This amazing film, winner of the 2022 Academy Award for Best Documentary (short subject), shares the story of Lusia "Lucy" Harris, a pioneer of women’s basketball. Harris talks of her love of basketball from childhood with her characteristic good humor and humility. Criticized for her height, basketball helped her to view that as an asset. She led her college team to three national women’s basketball championships, competed in the 1976 Montreal Olympics, and she was the first woman officially drafted by the National Basketball Association. Lusia Harris died in January 2022, but her legacy of helping to bring women’s basketball to the fore lives on.
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Don’t Treat Your Life as a Project

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DailyGood News That Inspires

December 1, 2022

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Don't Treat Your Life as a Project

Don’t let the lure of the dramatic arc distract you from the digressive amplitude of being alive.

– Kieran Setiya –

Don’t Treat Your Life as a Project

“The idea that we narrate our lives to ourselves, and that doing so is part of living well, is sufficiently commonplace that its most vocal critic, the philosopher Galen Strawson, could describe it as “a fallacy of our age.” He lists an impressive roster of advocates, including the neurologist and author Oliver Sacks (“Each of us constructs and lives a ‘narrative’…this narrative is us”), the psychologist Jerome Bruner (“We become the autobiographical narratives by which we ‘tell about’ our lives”)…It sounds appealing, in a way. Who doesn’t think they have a brilliant memoir in them? But the question isn’t rhetorical: Many of us don’t think that and a lot of the rest are kidding themselves. “I have absolutely no sense of my life as a narrative with form, or indeed as a narrative without form,” Strawson writes. And yet he seems to be living quite well.” In the following piece, Kieran Setiya, a philosopher at MIT, makes a case for resisting the tendency to see your life as a narrative journey. { read more }

Be The Change

If inspired, experiment this week with tuning in to, what Setiya calls, “the pure abundance of incident,” and notice what that opens up beyond your usual way of parsing your life and its happenings.

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