Sentimental Value (2025) dir. Joachim Trier
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@wavesofundoing
Sentimental Value (2025) dir. Joachim Trier

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The human heart stripped of fat and muscle, with just the angel veins exposed.
“When we hear the sound of the bell, we should open ourselves up to allow all the generations of ancestors in us to hear the bell at the same time as we do. It means we shouldn’t imprison ourselves in a shell of self – we should allow our ancestors to listen to the bell at the same time. That is our practice at that moment, because all the generations of ancestors, including our father and our mother are in us in a very concrete way - in every cell of our body. The body contains the mind – the soma contains the psyche, and we could say that the mind also contains the body. That means that the psyche contains the soma and that psyche includes feelings, perceptions, mental formations and consciousness and we should learn to see our mental formations are made out of cells, just as the body is made out of cells. The cells of the body contain the cells of the consciousness and the cells of the consciousness contain the cells of the body.” -Thich Nhat Hanh: “We Are Our Ancestors”
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“From the perspective of the self, the world is either for us or against us. If it is for us, its purpose is to feed our infinite attachments. If it is against us, it is to be rejected and it adds to our infinite paranoia. It is either our friend or our enemy, something to lure in or reject. The stronger we cling to a self, the stronger our belief grows in a solid, objective world that exists separate from us. The more we see it as solid and separate, the more the world haunts us: we are haunted by what we want from the world, and we are haunted by our struggle to protect ourselves from it.
The many problems we see in the larger world today, and also encounter in our own personal lives, spring from the belief that the enemy or threat is outside of us. This split occurs when we forget how deeply connected we are to others and the world around us. This is not to say that mind and the phenomenal world are one and that everything we experience is a mere figment of our imagination. It simply means that what we believe to be a self and what we believe to be other than self are inextricably linked and that, in truth, the self can only exist in relation to other. Seeing them as separate is really the most primitive way of viewing and engaging our lives.”
~ Dzigar Kongtrul, Light Comes Through
Karolina Matyjaszkowicz — Together we Grow and Develop (acrylic on canvas, 2024)
reality always contains a third possibility. Its never simply this or that.

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Manuel Amado (1938-2019) — The Harlequin Making Himself Funny and the Devil Watching [oil on canvas, 2004]
this is what you have to do to not let your spirit die
[“The first step is insisting that emotional labor, together with other private, unremunerated feminized forms of work, be rendered visible. Instead of people treating emotional labor as an extension of being sexed or gendered as female, emotional labor should be seen as a form of work demanding time, effort, and skill. Nor should emotional labor, in the same vein, be seen as a passive expression of an innate trait, say, an expression of possessing emotional intelligence. What we see as the expression of emotional intelligence is emotional labor in action, and we should acknowledge it and reward it as such.
The next step is marking the emotional labor provided and relied on as valuable, and sometimes even vital. Such a marking needn’t necessarily be rewarded with money. Marking a performance as valuable can involve nonmonetary rewards like affording the doer of the task real status, expressing gratitude, and marking the performance as deserving of reciprocity or even an IOU for another type of performance.
For couples seeking to make their relationship more egalitarian, emotional labor sweat equity can start being attained with timekeeping as one way of measuring output, as long as emotional labor is seen as its own category on top of other activities and chores. Whose feelings are being put first? Whose experience is being protected? Who is filtering their emotions for the benefit of the group? Who is taking up space? Negotiating different responsibilities, including sharing the overall responsibility of the well-being of a family unit or a group, or deciding in a way that feels fair who can carry the burden of that responsibility, is an obvious part of it too.
Licensed psychotherapist Shirley Johnson said that she often reminds people who have been in relationships for decades that it is never too late to renegotiate labor divisions or dynamics. Communication lines need to be open. Johnson, who works with individuals and couples, explained in an interview that emotional labor came up especially as an issue in “hetero cis” couples. She agreed with studies and interviews that this was mostly an unequal burden carried by women even if they worked, or by those playing traditional feminine roles in non-breadwinner situations.
But Johnson warned that better dynamics when it came to emotional labor also involved women letting go of what she called “compulsive caretaking at one’s own expense.” This was something the psychotherapist had observed in all people who at one point had been socialized as women, regardless of age, race, ethnicity, or religion. “I see this so prominently in my practice that women are very much in this compulsive caretaking role. And often they don’t know it, and it is so entrenched as the norm in our society. Even the idea that they should keep someone happy. It becomes very toxic.”
Erica, my coffee shop interviewee, was particularly reflective on the amount of personal responsibility she carried in performing an inordinate amount of emotional labor and household duties, on top of working and being the primary parent. “The men say, ‘I didn’t ask you to do it, nobody cares if our kid’s sandwich is cut into little stars.’ That’s always a balance. My husband, when I get frustrated, I come home and I am going to have to do the dishes, and he says, ‘I will do them, I will do them!’ And I say, ‘I know, but I want to start dinner,’ and he says, ‘Why don’t we just order something,’ and I say, ‘I know we can just order something but I have this nice really healthy meal planned for all of us. So that we can stay healthy and not die.’”
Erica’s emotional labor lies in the details of the tasks she performs—injecting thoughtfulness into pretty sandwich cutting and doing what needs to be done to get her husband to be healthy and avoid hereditary heart disease. Some of it she sees as superfluous, and some of it is necessary, even if she ends up caring more for her adult loved one than they are caring for themselves. “The world wouldn’t stop if I didn’t do it,” she told me. “So part of this is that whole balance of how much of this is because we choose to do it, because this is what we think we are expected to do.”
Johnson explained that “often the person doing that labor is scared of handing over that labor because their identity is baked into that labor.” This was something I also encountered in some interviews with parents, particularly a few mothers of toddlers, who were desperate for more hands-on help but were also unwilling to give up much of their role. Erica despaired at the amount of labor, including unpaid emotional labor, she did, but also took some of the blame.
“Part of it is me. I like keeping everyone around me happy. I want to be a good hostess, I want to be a good mom, I want to be a good wife, I want everyone to be happy and healthy. I want to keep our son’s teachers happy. I want to make sure he has all his extra clothes, and he doesn’t run out of diapers.”
Johnson suggested a two-pronged approach to address compulsive caretaking. First, women, or people socialized in feminine roles, needed to learn “to tolerate a bigger array of emotions” and accept that not everyone was going to be happy all the time. Accepting this would lead to the withholding of the labor to other members of the family or the group, who—through the absence of the labor—would be forced into acknowledging it was there. The second component involved each person taking responsibility for their needs, identifying what they were, and seeking to fulfill them, including through communicating them to their partner. “The more each person is caring for their needs, self-caring, the stronger the relationship is,” Johnson said.
Doing an inventory of needs and sharing that with a partner was key not only because it helped fulfill that need but also because it decreased a key component of emotional labor: constant preemptive thoughtfulness. “We are supporting decreasing anticipating one another’s behavior,” Johnson said, as constant projection into the future causes anxiety. This exercise disrupts the notion that one person or group should have their needs seamlessly anticipated and catered to, and another person should be in a constant, anxious state of multidimensional projection.”]
rose hackman, from emotional labor: the invisible work shaping our lives and how to claim our power, 2023
You have to breathe. The world comes into you, right into your lungs and into your blood stream, through your heart. Without this contact to the environment we die. So the fantasy that I am complete in myself is false. I am dependent and life is interdependent and as long as we cling to this idea of automonous existence our delusion brings us into inefficient and unfulfilling interactions with the world
- James Low
The truth I love in loving my brother cannot be something merely philosophical and abstract. It must be at the same time supernatural and concrete, practical and alive. And I mean these words in no metaphorical sense. The truth I must love in my brother is God Himself, living in him. I must seek the life of the Spirit of God breathing in him. And I can only discern and follow that mysterious life by the action of the same Holy Spirit living and acting in the depths of my own heart.
Thomas Merton, No Man Is An Island
When people truly love each other, they experience far more than just a mutual need for each other’s company and consolation. In—or through and because of—their relationship with each other they become different people: they become more than their everyday selves; they become more alive, more understanding, more abiding, more enduring, more patient, more courageous. They become better people. They are made over into new beings. They are transformed by the power of their love.
Thomas Merton, Love and Living

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In one sense we are always travelling, travelling as if we did not know where we were going. In another sense we have already arrived. We cannot arrive at the perfect possession of God in this life, and that is why we are travelling and in darkness. But we already possess Him by grace and therefore in that sense we have arrived and are dwelling in the light. But oh! How far I have to go to find You in Whom I have already arrived.
Thomas Merton, The Seven Storey Mountain
Trinick Tarot. Album of the Great Symbols of the Paths; c. 1917-21
In today's state of hyperactivity, where boredom is not allowed to emerge, we never reach the state of deep mental relaxation. The information society is an age of heightened mental tension, because the essence of information is surprise and the stimulus it provides. The tsunami of information means that our perceptual apparatus is permanently stimulated. It can no longer enter into contemplation. The tsunami of information fragments our attention. It prevents the contemplative lingering that is essential to narrating and careful listening . . . In the process of digitalization, . . . information acquires an altogether different status. Reality itself takes on the form of information and data. For the most part, we perceive reality in terms of information or through the lens of information. Information is an idea—that is, a re-representation. When reality takes the form of information, the immediate experience of presence withers. When digitalization gives everything the form of information, reality is flattened.
Byung-Chul Han, The Crisis of Narration
Magdalene Afterwards by Marie Howe
unironically when i’m sick i just chant this shit in my head until it’s over

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"In my day, we knew how to drown plausibly, to renounce the body's seven claims to buoyancy.
And there was the promise of pleasure in every question we postponed. Like a blouse, the most elegant crimes were left undone.
Now I am the only one who knows the story of the baleful forms our valences assumed in winter light. My people, are you not
horrified of how these verbs decline— their great ostentation, their doors of different sizes?"
—Ben Lerner, The Lichtenberg Figures