A Place of My Own Quotes
A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
by
Michael Pollan5,544 ratings, 3.86 average rating, 570 reviews
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A Place of My Own Quotes
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“Daydreaming does not enjoy tremendous prestige in our culture, which tends to regard it as unproductive thought. Writers perhaps appreciate its importance better than most, since a fair amount of what they call work consists of little more than daydreaming edited. Yet anyone who reads for pleasure should prize it too, for what is reading a good book but a daydream at second hand? Unlike any other form of thought, daydreaming is its own reward.”
― A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
― A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
“Unlike any other form of thought, daydreaming is its own reward.”
― A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
― A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
“People have traditionally turned to ritual to help them frame and acknowledge and ultimately even find joy in just such a paradox of being human - in the fact that so much of what we desire for our happiness and need for our survival comes at a heavy cost. We kill to eat, we cut down trees to build our homes, we exploit other people and the earth. Sacrifice - of nature, of the interests of others, even of our earlier selves - appears to be an inescapable part of our condition, the unavoidable price of all our achievements. A successful ritual is one that addresses both aspects of our predicament, recalling us to the shamefulness of our deeds at the same time it celebrates what the poet Frederick Turner calls "the beauty we have paid for with our shame." Without the double awareness pricked by such rituals, people are liable to find themselves either plundering the earth without restraint or descending into self-loathing and misanthropy. Perhaps it's not surprising that most of us today bring one of those attitudes or the other to our conduct in nature.”
― A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
― A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
“In the modern view, the pitched roof was itself a “dead concept,” but equally unhealthy
were all those other dead concepts that got stored underneath the gable, in the attic. For there is where the ghosts of our past reside: the bric-abrac
and mementos that a lifetime collects; the love letters, photographs, and memories that clutter an attic and threaten to bear us back in time.”
― A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
were all those other dead concepts that got stored underneath the gable, in the attic. For there is where the ghosts of our past reside: the bric-abrac
and mementos that a lifetime collects; the love letters, photographs, and memories that clutter an attic and threaten to bear us back in time.”
― A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
“The reason I didn’t have a normal, dad-built tree house is that, as I’ve indicated, I didn’t have anything even approaching that kind of dad. He was, and remains, one of the world’s great indoorsmen, a delegator of all conceivable outdoor tasks—lawn mowing, car washing, gutter cleaning, and tree-house building. By the time I was ten, which was when I’d kicked off my campaign for a tree house in the woods behind our ranch, he didn’t even own the tools needed to build one, having “accidentally” nailed his tool chest behind the walls of a cedar closet he’d tried to build for my mother in the basement. Whether consciously or not, my father had clearly wanted to make sure the cedar closet would be his last do-it-yourself project, and it was.”
― A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams
― A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams
“Undivided plates of glass often wear a glazed expression, look blind. Muntins wink.”
― A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams
― A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams
“Lewis Mumford once wrote that somewhere in the nineteenth century it became necessary to know how to read before one could truly see a building.”
― A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
― A Place of My Own: The Education of an Amateur Builder
“To trim, I decided, is human, which probably explains the modernists’ contempt for it. Because if we’re not using trim to hide our poor craftsmanship, we’re using it to proclaim our fine craftsmanship—either way, sloth or pride, trim embodies the most human of failings and thereby spoils the supreme objectivity that modernists strove for.”
― A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams
― A Place of My Own: The Architecture of Daydreams
