Spotlight encounter
*during D&D*
Person 1: Who’s on first watch?
Person 2: What’s on second?
Person 3: Well, I don’t know who’s on third.
seen from United States
seen from Philippines
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from France
seen from Paraguay

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from South Africa
seen from Kazakhstan
seen from Martinique
seen from United States

seen from Canada

seen from China

seen from France

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Spain
seen from United Kingdom
seen from France

seen from United States
Spotlight encounter
*during D&D*
Person 1: Who’s on first watch?
Person 2: What’s on second?
Person 3: Well, I don’t know who’s on third.
The future is dark, which is on the whole, the best thing the future can be, I think.
Diary of Virginia Woolf (18 January 1919)
Conscience … it is the part of our mind that makes us lose our minds; the moralist that prevents us from evolving a personal, more complex and subtle morality; that prevents us from finding, by experiment, what may be the limits of our being. So when Richard III says, in the final act of his own play, “O coward conscience, how dost thou afflict me!”, a radical alternative is being proposed. That conscience makes cowards of us all because it is itself cowardly. We believe in, we identify with, this starkly condemnatory and punitively forbidding part of ourselves; and yet this supposedly authoritative part of ourselves is itself a coward.
Adam Phillips
The habit of writing thus for my own eye only is good practice. It loosens the ligaments… What sort of diary should I like mine to be? Something loose knit and yet not slovenly, so elastic that it will embrace anything, solemn, slight or beautiful that comes into my mind. I should like it to resemble some deep old desk, or capacious hold-all, in which one flings a mass of odds and ends without looking them through. I should like to come back, after a year or two, and find that the collection had sorted itself and refined itself and coalesced, as such deposits so mysteriously do, into a mould, transparent enough to reflect the light of our life, and yet steady, tranquil compounds with the aloofness of a work of art.
Virginia Woolf
I can fight it out, but I’ve not as much heart for anything as I had a year ago. I suppose the test of one’s decency is how much of a fight one can put up after one has stopped caring.
Willa Cather
Generosity is also a type of violence.
Dan Beachy-Quick, Ten Meditations in Poetry's Hut
Is it not curious, that so vast a being as the whale should see the world through so small an eye, and hear the thunder through an ear which is smaller than a hare's? But if his eyes were broad as the lens of Herschel's great telescope; and his ears capacious as the porches of cathedrals; would that make him any longer of sight, or sharper of hearing? Not at all. --Why then do you try to "enlarge" your mind? Subtilize it.
Herman Melville, Moby Dick
Here was a man some twenty thousand miles from home, by the way of Cape Horn, that is--which was the only way he could get there--thrown among people as strange to him as though he were in the planet Jupiter; and yet he seemed entirely at ease with his own companionship; always equal to himself. Surely this was a touch of fine philosophy; though no doubt he had never heard there was such a thing as that. But, perhaps, to be true philosophers, we mortals should not be conscious of living or so striving. So soon as I hear that such or such a man gives himself out for a philosopher, I conclude that, like the dyspeptic old woman, he must have "broken his digester."
Herman Melville, Moby Dick