From The Book of Delights: Essays, Ross Gay
I suspect if we took a little time and had a little imagination we might recognize in all manner of exchange – which is to say collaboration – some kind of adornment or prettiness or sweetness to make the collaboration take.
From The Book of Delights: Essays, Ross Gay The physics is actually very straightforward: rip currents form when a wide area of water on the beach is pulled back to the sea by gravity, but finds a narrow channel to flow through. Water will accelerate whenever it passes through a narrower gap – like when you put your thumb over a tap or the end of a hose – and so a fast current that flows out toward the sea is formed. They can flow at eight feet per second, faster than any swimmer.
From How to Read Water: Clues and Patterns from Puddles to the Sea, Tristan Gooley ... that delight will be with you daily, that you needn't hoard it.
From The Book of Delights: Essays, Ross Gay So that the clunky, clumsy attempt at linguistic inclusion can itself be a kind of elegance.
From The Book of Delights: Essays, Ross Gay |
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