⌁ How this book wants to be read
The book
that is slower
than you are.
I started this book because I was tired. Not the kind of tired you fix with a holiday. The kind you fix by remembering that watching a kettle boil is, in fact, a complete activity.
For most of my life I tried to be fast. I went to MIT to study architecture. I went to Harvard to study anthropology. I lived in Shanghai for ten years. I missed three deadlines, broke two relationships, and drank a great deal of coffee. The world, as far as I could tell, rewarded speed. So I gave it speed.
And then, very slowly, I noticed the things I was missing.
I noticed that the most interesting people I knew did not speak first. I noticed that the best architects I had read about — Louis Kahn, Tadao Ando, Geoffrey Bawa — were the ones who had waited the longest before drawing the first line. I noticed that my father, who never socialised and carried his lunch in a tea flask, was the calmest person in any room.
Slowness is not laziness. Slowness is the discipline of looking long enough to see the whole thing.
This book is a collection of small things I have learned by going slower than I was supposed to. There are ten movements. Each is short. Each is paired with a piece of art that is in the public domain — meaning it belongs to all of us, the way the sky and the alphabet belong to all of us.
You can read it cover to cover, but you do not have to. The pieces are short on purpose. Most of them are 250 to 600 words. I have learned that almost everything worth saying can be said on a single page; the rest is throat-clearing.
If you only have one minute today, read one aphorism. If you have ten, read one essay. If you have an evening, give it the evening. The book will not get up and leave.
— Non, written from a desk by the Yangtze, finished by the Chao Phraya, edited at six thousand metres above the Pacific.