I am a child twenty-first century

Stanislaw Barszczak, The awakening from history —
You are the finest, loveliest, tenderest, and most beautiful person I have ever known- and even that is an understatement. Tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther… You are mysterious, I love you. You’re beautiful, intelligent, and virtuous, and that’s the rarest known combination. I saw you in Czestochowa. As soon as I moved to a small seminary in 1976, I looked in adult life, you know. Fall if you will, but rise you must. To be kind is more important than to be right. Many times, what people need is not a brilliant mind that speaks but a special heart that listens. I learned there. Kindness is the language which the deaf can hear and the blind can see. There were a lot of adventure books for boys, historical novels by Joseph Kraszewski, and whatever mystery novels the alarmed librarian imagined might not corrupt an eager but innocent youth. I read my first book on Victor Hugo at age 17 there, and I was hooked. I also became fascinated by local history… There are hundreds of books about the mother of God, but I have an image of her in my mind that is unlike any picture I have seen anywhere else, based on material at Czestochowa and 40 years of researching and thinking about her. Our Lady of Jasna Gora, my mother always. I had no plans, no definite intentions, except to kiss her lips again, to hold her in his arms. Though I believe I encountered death, which was a bit too much for a nine-year-old…History is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake, she said then in her life. There are all kinds of love in this world but never the same love twice. We all have souls of different ages. Don’t forget who you are and where you come from. Mom, you have a place in my heart no one else ever could have. I loved my mother more than life. Hence my love for Lady of Czestochowa in her wondrous face was growing ever. On gym days I became fascinated by the presidency of the mother of God on an image of Black Madonna from Jasna Gora. Earlier I knew the Priest Stanisław Konczyk, much-loved worldwide for his warm-hearted work on the parish of Ząbkowice. He would have told today: when, in the third book, we do learn the identity of the murderer, the information comes in a muted, nearly off-hand manner, and the man has died long before… At that time I had a professor. We already have set for the teacher, not the sage now, if it is good, I do not think. My professor called for leaders who, by boldly interpreting the nation’s conscience, could lift a people out of their everyday selves. That people can be lifted into their better selves is the secret of transforming leadership. Keep love in your heart. A life without it is like a sunless garden when the flowers are dead, he spoke. He was a 80-year-old, yet a charismatic personality nonetheless. Keep love in your heart. A life without it is like a sunless garden when the flowers are dead, he spoke. If you are not too long, I will wait here for you all my life. Most people are other people. Their thoughts are someone else’s opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation…I went to Cracow then. There were a wonderful stay in my life. Apearing at the Seminary in Cracow shortly after the book’s release, this is a wonderful opportunity to experience the polish phenomenon that is the Priest John Twardowski imagination, by spending an evening in the company of the prolific poet. He would have told today: Mockery and contempt for others, unleashed in the name of free speech, are creating a toxic environment where respect and decency are unlamented relics of the past. We have ignored the ‘dumbing down’ of education and abandoned parts of our cities to drugs, alcohol and violence. As long as they remain insulated in middle class ghettos, our politicians can ignore this. But we can’t afford to give up on the ideal of a more civilized and equal society. To live together in healthy communities, we need to put a stop to the culture of alcohol, aggression and the glorification of violence. Hear a literary great speak about a topic that is very close to his heart. Beauty is the only thing that time cannot harm. Philosophies fall away like sand, creeds follow one another, but what is beautiful is a joy for all seasons, a possession for all eternity. I can resist everything except temptation. It is absurd to divide people into good and bad. People are either charming or tedious. The world is a stage, but the play is badly cast. Romance should never begin with sentiment. It should begin with science and end with a settlement. I had a connoisseur’s… appreciation of fear…As a young priest on the parish I started writing my stories. If you did not write every day, the poisons would accumulate and you would begin to die, or act crazy or both-you must stay drunk on writing so reality cannot destroy you. I don’t decide. My secret self decides. I just go with my subconscious. If it wants to do a poem, I do a poem, and if it wants to do a play, I do a play. So I’m not in charge, I’m not in control… You see I usually find myself among strangers because I drift here and there trying to forget the sad things that happened to me… I generally wade in blind and trust to fate and instinct to see me through. But once day I thought, You just have to trust your own madness. Suddenly I realized that what I was regretting was not the lost past but the lost future, not what had not been but what would never be. And in the end, we were all just humans…Drunk on the idea that love, only love, could heal our brokenness. I instantly chucked my academic ambitions and began writing fiction full-time. There have been times when I reread – or at least leafed through – something because I’d sent a copy to a friend, and what usually happened was that I noticed dozens and dozens of clumsy phrases I wished I could rewrite. Intellectual labor is a common technique for the avoidance of thinking. My first real breakthrough collided with the last months of the polish pope pontificate, which had every intention of enjoying my success as much as I did. Each new book was a tremendous challenge for me. You don’t have to burn books to destroy a culture. Just get people to stop reading them. As soon as I started writing “The world of my dreams,” by which I mean while writing its first sentence, I felt a sudden, reassuring charge of excitement. I knew it was going to work. Everyone wants to get better as they go along, but sometimes it’s all you can do to stay consistent, once day I said it. Every writer must acknowledge and be able to handle the unalterable fact that he has, in effect, given himself a life sentence in solitary confinement. The ordinary world of work is closed to him – and that if he’s lucky! Occasionally.. .what you have to do is go back to the beginning and see everything in a new way. You’ll never get anything done if you walk around with an unchipped heart. The world is full of ghosts, and some of them are still people, who are just like you and me, they still want things. They look at us all the time, and they miss being alive. We have taste and color and smell and feelings, and they don’t have any of those things. They stare at us, they don’t miss anything. They really see what’s going on, and we hardly ever really see that. We’re too busy thinking about things and getting everything wrong, so we miss eighty percent of what’s happening… When was the huge social Solidarity trade union I loved my homeland forever I think. Nothing ever begins. There is no first moment; no single word or place from which this or any story springs. The threads can always be traced back to some earlier tale, and the tales that preceded that; though as the narrator’s voice recedes the connections will seem to grow more tenuous, for each age will want the tale told as if it were of its own making… From the Solidarity movement and the Polish pope, something new was created in human history. To dream in isolation can be properly splendid to be sure; but to dream in company seems to me infinitely preferable…We’re too much ourselves. Afraid of letting go of what we are, in case we are nothing, and holding on so tight, we lose everything else. I am a man, who tell stories. This is a gift from God, who spoke our species into being, but left the end of our story untold. That mystery is troubling to us. How could it be otherwise? Without the final part, we think, how are we to make sense of all that went before: which is to say, our lives? So we make stories of our own, in fevered and envious imitation of our Maker, hoping that we’ll tell, by chance, what God left untold. And finishing our tale, come to understand why we were born… I want to be remembered as a writer, someone who used his imagination as a way to journey beyond the limits of self, beyond the limits of flesh and blood, beyond the limits of even perhaps life itself, in order to discover some sense of order in what appears to be a disordered universe. I’m using my imagination to find meaning, both for myself and, I hope, for my readers… In a time of universal deceit – telling the truth is a revolutionary act. The past was erased, the erasure was forgotten, the lie became the truth… I would see a movie now, that refers to a surveillance device. If you think it, the camera will see it. A lot of life is dealing with ‘my curse, dealing with the cards you were given that aren’t so nice. Does it make you into a monster, or can you temper it in some way, or accept it and go in some other direction? Every life is in many days, day after day. We walk through ourselves, meeting robbers, ghosts, giants, old men, young men, wives, widows, brothers-in-love. But always meeting ourselves. Think you’re escaping and run into yourself. Longest way round is the shortest way home… Conscience- this is the little voice that whispers, that someone is watching on you. Citizens not produced in factories; in the family, the mother’s heart lies the nation. Nothing in the history of the nation, which took place can not be erased. A nation that does not believe in its greatness and do not want the great people- the nation dies. You have to believe in its greatness and to desire her, Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski, the primate of the first millennium said. Poland in my eyes is great … Poland is a great thing… But a new life should begin with new age, I think. Well, you never knew exactly how much space you occupied in people’s lives. So, I’m not sure what I’ll do, but- well, I want to go places and see people. I want my mind to grow. I shall go on shining as a brilliantly meaningless figure in a meaningless world. Serve new communities, it is my job. Though I want to live where things happen on a big scale.

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