Saturday, May 27, 2023

"Attention is the Beginning of Devotion"


Ok so this is a different kind of blog post.  After posting my blog about feathers and paying attention last night, when I woke this morning, I read a note that came in an email from The Atlantic magazine.  So here it is.  I was so moved by the discussion of the work of a famous woman poet whose work I don't know, but I am going to start reading!  The article:

“Attention is the beginning of devotion,” the poet Mary Oliver wrote in her final collection of essays. In 2021, the poet Leila Chatti took up Oliver’s words, reflecting on the challenge of them: “All day, the world makes its demands. There’s so much of it, world / begging to be noticed.” For those of us working to slow down, to smell the roses, to look one another in the eyes rather than in the iMessage bubbles, Oliver is a perfect guide. As my colleague Franklin Foer wrote in 2019, “It was not Mary Oliver’s intent to critique this new world—and it’s hard to imagine she even owned a flip phone—but her poetry captures its spiritual costs.”

The world makes its demands, and distraction has both personal costs and societal ones. My colleague Megan Garber has smartly noted how an overload of information and a fracturing of attention makes people, and Americans in particular, less equipped to meet the challenges of the moment. “Today’s news moves as a maelstrom of information at once trifling and historic, petty and grave, cajoling, demanding, funny, horrifying, uplifting, embarrassing, fleeting, loud—so much of it, at so many scales,” she wrote  in 2021.

A lack of attention is dangerous. But we might also spend time thinking about the beauty of its presence, what attention gives back to those who pay it. I’ll leave you with a few more of Oliver’s words: “When it’s over, I want to say: all my life / I was a bride married to amazement. / I was the bridegroom, taking the world into my arms. 

---Isabel Fattal, Senior Editor at The Atlantic



 

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I like this new quote. I will be sure to look up Mary Oliver. I love the new feather! betsey

Anonymous said...

So much to ponder with this quote. Enjoy the simple pleasures of nature. I am comfortable not living in the fast pace of a working society now.
Joan