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Steve Adams's avatar

I have a teacher friend who's commented on how the noise in the halls of her high school has changed. Where before there was this loud jubilant racket of voices (which I sure remember from mine), now it's much quieter, with so many students staring down at their phone silently while they walk.

On the subject of books re: going solo, I came across Fenton Johnson's "At the Center of All Beauty: Solitude and the Creative Life" maybe two years ago. It was the first time I'd ever experienced the sense that someone was writing about me personally. In it he compares artistic figures (he starts off with Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson, which makes a fascinating pairing) who have a mystic streak, and shows how richly their lives are connected to the world around them, if not necessarily to a specific partner. He calls these people "solitaries" and also shares his own experience as a solitary, as a connective thread. For the record, he does say that some of the best relationships he knows consist of two solitaries who know how to respect each other's space. To kind of repeat, and what had a lot of meaning for me, was his perspective of these people not as loners or emotionally disconnected, but the opposite. Dickinson is shown so passionately activated by her one acre of the world that it's not surprising she didn't venture much farther as it would've no doubt overwhelmed.

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John Koeter's avatar

“Put that cell phone away and have dinner with someone who has something to say.” Kristi and I make a point of doing this. Earlier in our relationship, the ubiquitous cell phone often interfered until we made that rule.

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