LISTEN. All our closing texts in CoPhi end on guardedly-hopeful notes.
Kurt Andersen imagines we might have hit "Peak Fantasyland" and are ready to come down the other side, in the direction of greater fealty to truth, facts, and reality-the real varieties, not fakes.
Susan Neiman says "real grown-ups are not long distracted by bread and circuses. No longer confused by baubles or shy with inexperience, we are better able to see what we see, and say it. We? All of us..."
Earlier, making the same point about the pleasures of maturity, Neiman said we "no longer care if that sunset in that moment would seem kitschy if seen through other eyes. You see it with yours, and you're simply grateful..."
John Kaag concludes with sunset and gratitutde too. "I looked out to the Statue of Liberty again, and back down into the water below. The sun was indeed setting, and I tried to let myself watch it, as Whitman and James hoped we would, for what seemed like many minutes. Just long enough to be glad that I still had the chance." Earlier, channeling James, he agreed that "chance makes the difference between a life of which the keynote is resignation and a life of...hope."
Henry David Thoreau wrote a pretty good conclusion too, reminding us that every sunset is also a sunrise. "Only that day dawns to which we are awake. There is more day to dawn. The sun is but a morning star."
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