― Anthony Doerr, All the Light We Cannot See
Sublime:
1- to cause to pass directly from the solid to the vapor state and condense back to solid form
2[French sublimer, from Latin sublimare]
a (1) : to elevate or exalt especially in dignity or honor (2) : to render finer (as in purity or excellence)
b : to convert (something inferior) into something of higher worth
For me, writing is as much a study of words as anything. English, in many ways, is a limited language, and so you see how far you can stretch the words. And you wrap your characters in their stories with words, symbols, metaphors. You reach out to try to touch what is sublime.
Steve Jobs had a deep understanding of sublimity, of how to make an inanimate object, a computer screen sublime. His story is one of deep and dark contrasts, but certainly one of sublimity. He was always striving for it, though often at the expense of love. I think that is what is fascinating about him to people is his complex story, such a study of contrasts.
Water is sublimely beautiful because it is always in this process of sublimity, of becoming something else. When you are near it, you can literally hear it happening, in the lapping, the trickling, the rushing, etc... I went running by the river today, stopping to stretch and watch the water flow past every obstacle with grace and a quiet humility.
"Nothing in the world is more flexible and yielding than water. Yet when it attacks the firm and the strong, none can withstand it, because they have no way to change it. So the flexible overcome the adamant, the yielding overcome the forceful. Everyone knows this, but no one can do it."
Lao Tzu
"Don't you realize that the sea is the home of water? All water is off on a journey unless it's in the sea, and it's homesick, and bound to make its way home someday"
Zora Neale Hurston
To touch and behold that which is sublime... to me that is so much of the journey.