In a recent Guardian, Josh Lacey reviews Alison Gopnik’s The Philosophical Baby: What Children’s Minds Tell Us
about Truth, Love and the Meaning of Life. He highly recommends the book to parents of young children, and to anyone else who has ever been a baby. According to Gopnik, a professor of psychology, we now know that “young children are actually smarter, more imaginative, more caring and even more conscious than adults.”
Thinking, as I was in the previous post, about why travel had apparently opened up my creativity, this jumped out of the review:
What if we want to rid our adult minds of inhibitions and return to the joys of being a baby? Travel and meditation, suggests Gopnik, are the best ways to rekindle the imaginative confusion of our childhood, heightening our awareness by forcing us to experience the world anew. Visiting a strange country overwhelms our senses with experience, while some forms of meditation allow you to escape routine daily thoughts and instead ‘become vividly aware of everything around you at once’ until all your senses ‘seem to be illuminated simultaneously, with little distinction between the trivial and the important, or the internal and external.’
(I’ve never gotten far with meditation, but coincidentally I did turn to it on the plane ride. Flying through the night in a cramped economy-class aisle seat, unable to sleep, jostled by other passengers going to and from the bathroom, I closed my eyes and counted my breathing. I never once got past one breath before my mind wandered, and when I realized that, I started counting again. After doing that about a dozen times, I was asleep.)
--Julian
Comments