Some things you learn the hard way by experience. This is one of them.
This book is hard to swallow for the Fitness Industry (and too many athletes that focus on nuances and not the greater picture)
Este libro resume 25 anos de experiencia persoal. Di moitas cousas que fun aprendendo (polas boas e polas malas)
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Non hai drama, nin reflexión, hai acción. Movémonos coas ondas e a brisa do mar, cos arumes dos pinos, do sal, e do ron. Lemos os xogos de enganos e artimañas das que se valen os protagonistas (todo pirolos) para sobrevivir aos acontecementos. Asistimos, abraiados, á valentía e coraxe do nóso heróe, como por instinto e serindipia parece determinar os acontecementos.
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Updated with a new introduction from Robin Wall Kimmerer, the special edition of Braiding Sweetgrass, …
Inspirational!
5 stars
I missed out on the opportunity to borrow this book, highly recommended by a beautiful friend, in its original publication a couple of years ago so almost-literally leapt at the chance to review a NetGalley copy of the new Penguin publication. I'm so glad that I did! Robin Wall Kimmerer's life philosophies and the way in which she looks to plant wisdom for answers to human social and environmental problems are exactly what we need to be exploring right now, especially as people want new lifestyle choices in the wake of the epidemic. I began reading Braiding Sweetgrass wondering if this might be too 'hippy' a book for me to really get into. Within a hundred pages I was totally engrossed in every word Kimmerer wrote and frequently found myself nodding in enthusiastic agreement with her.
Kimmerer discusses ancient Native American ideas and practices, showing how the ideas behind them …
I missed out on the opportunity to borrow this book, highly recommended by a beautiful friend, in its original publication a couple of years ago so almost-literally leapt at the chance to review a NetGalley copy of the new Penguin publication. I'm so glad that I did! Robin Wall Kimmerer's life philosophies and the way in which she looks to plant wisdom for answers to human social and environmental problems are exactly what we need to be exploring right now, especially as people want new lifestyle choices in the wake of the epidemic. I began reading Braiding Sweetgrass wondering if this might be too 'hippy' a book for me to really get into. Within a hundred pages I was totally engrossed in every word Kimmerer wrote and frequently found myself nodding in enthusiastic agreement with her.
Kimmerer discusses ancient Native American ideas and practices, showing how the ideas behind them result in a completely different mindset to that of contemporary capitalist Western culture. I loved how she explains the influence of such basic concepts as our origin myths and was reminded strongly of Nesrine Malik's arguments in We Need New Stories. For the Potawatomi tribe, human life on Earth began with a woman whose fall from the sky was cushioned by geese catching her in their soft feathers and with all the animals helping her to create a home for herself. The Christian story begins in anger with a woman being evicted from paradise to cope as best she can in a lesser place. Our language also makes a huge difference to our worldview. In English, it is acceptable to refer to any nonhuman as 'it', ie. as a thing. For Native Americans, all animals have person status as do plants, rocks, water flows. It's much harder emotionally to mistreat someOne than someThing.
The combination of Kimmerer's philosophical approach together with her scientific knowledge and engaging, chatty tone made Braiding Sweetgrass an amazing read for me. While I was eager to keep reading what Kimmerer has to say, I also found myself frequently setting the book aside to appreciate a beautiful concept or to consider how I could apply a suggestion to my own lifestyle. I think it is generally accepted that humans have to make drastic changes to how we live and consume resources or we soon won't have a planet that's capable of supporting us all. I would highly recommend Braiding Sweetgrass as the perfect guide.
"As far as the body is concerned, stress is stress—it doesn't
matter if it comes from a session of intervals or from the
emotional strain of a romantic breakup, says John Kiely, an Irish
sports scientist and performance coach who's worked with world-
class athletes in numerous sports, including rugby and track"
it remainds me "calorie is a calorie wherever it comes from". My ass (excuse me). So "stress is stress"? I'm not sure. I can cope far better with phisical stress than with mental stress
por agora todo é "non hai evidencia científica que soporte que Xxxx mellora a recuperación", sendo Xxxx todas esas cousas que nos venden (literalmente). Nin meterlle proteínas ou comer xusto despois de adestrar (a non ser que vaias repetir en poucas horas); nin o frío/xeo; beber _gatorades tampouco; ... TODO MAL.
Nada, algo haberá, digo eu. A ver se vai resultar que tirarse no sofá patas parriba un par de horas é o que mellor nos recupera XD Espero non estar facendo spoiler
A novela das mulleres que rachan co silencio. Unha …
"novela-denuncia" dunha causa xusta (respeto polas mulleres)
4 stars
Eu: aquí, pensando.
(...)
Non son quen de sintetizar en dous párrafos o que denuncia esta novela: a discriminación das mulleres en todos os eidos polo feito de selo. A novela por o foco na violencia física e psicolóxica que algúns (demasiados) maridos exercen sobre as súas(!) mulleres.
Not all men!! (escoito)
Pois claro que non. Falamos dos roles asignados polo sistema establecido. Noutras sociedades son (foron, serán) diferentes, e o relevante é que os sistemas e as relacións sociais poden cambiarse de xeito consciente. Non é designio divino(!), nin tampouco a Selección Natural (forza motora da evolución), que de todo se escoita.
Tamén hai mulleres malas!!! (escoito)
Pois claro. O tema é parecido (en termos de xeneralización) ao listos/tontos/ignorantes/palurdos/traballadores/you-name-it que son outros pobos. Os centroeuropeos son moi traballadores e moi produtivos!! (escoito). Aquí se vive mejor!!. My ass.
Xa estou a misturar auga con aceite. …
Eu: aquí, pensando.
(...)
Non son quen de sintetizar en dous párrafos o que denuncia esta novela: a discriminación das mulleres en todos os eidos polo feito de selo. A novela por o foco na violencia física e psicolóxica que algúns (demasiados) maridos exercen sobre as súas(!) mulleres.
Not all men!! (escoito)
Pois claro que non. Falamos dos roles asignados polo sistema establecido. Noutras sociedades son (foron, serán) diferentes, e o relevante é que os sistemas e as relacións sociais poden cambiarse de xeito consciente. Non é designio divino(!), nin tampouco a Selección Natural (forza motora da evolución), que de todo se escoita.
Tamén hai mulleres malas!!! (escoito)
Pois claro. O tema é parecido (en termos de xeneralización) ao listos/tontos/ignorantes/palurdos/traballadores/you-name-it que son outros pobos. Os centroeuropeos son moi traballadores e moi produtivos!! (escoito). Aquí se vive mejor!!. My ass.
Xa estou a misturar auga con aceite. Mellor deixalo.
Nin machista nin feminista! (escoito)
É a vida social a xestión das relacións de poder?
A novela
A descrición da protagonista inicial (influencer) botábame un pouco para atrás, pero pronto se ve que é o xeito en que autora escolle un personaxe actual, para facernos ver que isto non é algo que pasaba antes, se non que é de agora.
Descríbese con crudeza e de xeito explícito (de forma necesaria) a violencia sobre a parella. Para iso recúrrese a dúas liñas temporais converxentes a través dun suceso paranormal e da historia familiar dos personaxes.
Aproveita a autora para reivindicar asimesmo, e pór en valor, a dignidade das mulleres que en tempos aínda máis difíciles loitaron por dereitos humanos fundamentais. Non esquece facer un aceno ao valor da cultura propia e ao proceso tamén violento que supón verse na obriga de abandonala (por medios violentos ao fin).