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Comments Tagged ‘time’

  • Where I Lived, And What I Lived For 13-23 (2 comments)

    • Comment by Paul Schacht on February 17, 2026

      @alexcampitiello You’ve put this very well! One gets the feeling that for Thoreau the process of writing—how the very act of writing changes what you understand and how you understand yourself—matters more than the product. Below is one version of this paragraph in the “A” draft of the Walden manuscript. There’s a lot of process on view here! You can also view the entire page containing this passage.

      If the value of writing lies more in process than in product, what do you think this means for the future of writing in the age of generative AI?

      portion of a page from Thoreau's Walden manuscript showing a draft of the

      Comment by Paul Schacht on February 17, 2026

      I love the connection you make here between Thoreau’s desire to avoid “hurry” and his “appreciation for the dawn,” @rlf9 (Beck). In both, there’s an escape from ordinary time; if you “Renew [yourself] completely each day”—”again, and again, and forever again” (as he describes in paragraph 14, quoting the words that he says were engraved on the tub of Tching-thang), you’re living in circular time, rather than the linear time that he envisions as an endless “stream” (see paragraph 23) running constantly away. This repeating circle essentially makes time stand still.

      In her comment on Thoreau’s critique that the nation “lives too fast”, @daphnepl writes that “I deleted social media a few months ago and I have never been happier because my free time is filled with my own thoughts, interactions, and creativity rather than consuming the experiences of strangers on the internet or idea that we need to be ever improving beings.” How do you feel, yourself, about the role that technology, in particular social media, plays in making life feel excessively hurried?

Source: https://commons.digitalthoreau.org/walden/comments/tags/time/