commiseration comes from latin
CUM=with MISERARI=misery,compassion
which means "to cry for someone else's misery"
which is a concept and gesture which may have multiple meanings and, most
of all, intentions, and which different people may interpret in different
ways.
so I will only speak about
Hi Michael,
of course there are different sensibilities and health care systems. And
I'm really happy that everything was allright.
I already gave some hints of what I meant in the previous message,
answering Annie: I guess you can find some indications of my point there
I will take your message
Salvatore -
Thank you for your answer to me - but thank you even more for your
answer to Annie, which is just fantastic!
I wanted to ask you about commiseration, though. Somewhere - I'm not
sure if it's on one of your websites or in one of your TED talks - you
mentioned about all these
Oh, Annie,
thank you so much for this, as it creates the opportunity to discuss
something very important.
There were many feelings at the time: fear of dying, helplessness, hope,
anger (in multiple ways). But one prevailed.
It all seemed like a paradox. A violent, continuous paradox in which
Dear Edward:
thank you!
and, for me, it all also resonates with the fact that it is very naive to
imagine that you fall sick alone.
When you become sick of a complex thing as cancer your friends and
relatives become diseased, too, because their lives change, they are
shattered. And so do your
Hi everyone,
Together with Kaja Marczewska and Andy Farnell, I’m running an afternoon
workshop/discussion next week that I thought might interest some of you. It's
entitled IP Theory and Practice for Art & Activism workshop, will take place on
June 10, and is as part of the Antiuniversity Now
Playing with Meditative Fire
http://www.alansondheim.org/lastus073.jpg Azure in Roslyn's
Northern Exposure set http://www.alansondheim.org/lastus.mp4 the
gap at 80 mph times 10 following a Mitsubishi sportscar with
cherry candy finish http://www.alansondheim.org/lastus097.jpg
Roslyn's Native