Ten Things That Astonish Me

photo by Mitchell Kaneshkevich

Ten Things That Astonish Me

Thanks to PS Pirro for the prompt for this post, asking us what still astonishes us; here’s my list:

  1. The realization that everything we think of as real is either just an appearance (like separate ‘things’ in space and time) or just a mental fabrication (like our ‘selves’). Scientists keep discovering this to be true, and even they find it too astonishing to believe and keep looking for a different answer.
  2. The staggering diversity of complex life — from bats to jellyfish to water-bears to sharks to seeds. And birds!
  3. The complexity and resilience of the human (or any creature’s) body. And the fact that it’s not a ‘thing’ but a borderless complicity, a trillion trillion inseparable things, endlessly, coherently interacting.
  4. Fungi.
  5. Music — its effect on us, what makes it ‘music’, and the mysterious process of its composition.
  6. The evocative power of light — firelight, street lamps, candlelight, the light of the sun (especially at dawn, at dusk, and reflected), the moon, and the stars.
  7. Gaia — the evolution and complicity of all life on earth.
  8. The macroscopic and microscopic universe, which, I have to believe, are infinite. Go as far or as deep as you like; you’ll never find the end. It’s turtles all the way down and all the way up.
  9. Electricity. (Or more precisely, electromagnetism.) We have no idea how it ‘works’. Neither do the eels who’ve employed it for seven million years or the birds who’ve navigated by it for 150 million.
  10. Imagery — reflections in water, prints in the sand, photographs, and all forms of art that conjure up images — that ‘imagine’.

Yes, I know, nothing really in this list specifically about the human species, or its ‘soul’ or ‘spirit’ or mental capacity or accomplishments or propensity to fall in love and persevere and make stuff. I am undoubtedly a misanthrope, but I see nothing extraordinary or astonishing about homo sapiens. Even our destructiveness is unremarkable.

But these more-than-human things — astonishing!

What would be on your list? No sarcasm please, though I’m sure it’s tempting; plenty of time for that later. Of human accomplishments, what would you rate as most astonishing? Language and how we’ve spread it? Some medical advances? The arrowhead and other weaponry? The control of fire and water?


Finding the Sweet Spot: the natural entrepreneur's guide to responsible, sustainable, joyful work

"Now what am I going to do?" is a question many people ask—and leave unanswered—at critical potential turning points in their careers. Perhaps you’re a new graduate, but instead of lining up for a boring entry-level job at a big corporation, you wish you could start your own sustainable and responsible business

Borrow from Open Library
Share this post