January09_1
Forget John Marsden, I'm reading 'Deep Survival' by Laurence Gonzales. It's dazzling.
I bought this book for $2 at a garage sale, which is an unprecedented sum given it had no slipcover. With no slipcover I had no cues to follow, no back blurb, no subtle dance of graphics and typeface to lure me in, so the few paragraphs I browsed in the garage were mighty persuasive.
Gonzales writes about why some people live through great adversity, and some don't. There is a lot to say about this book, but here's a little bit that gave me pause:
"Most people operate in an environment of such low risk that action, inaction, or the vicissitudes of brains have few consequences... Mistakes spend themselves harmlessly and dies out unnoticed instead of growing out of control." And isn't that the decription of a Sydney marketing manager's life mode?
Gonzales says most people don't get any practice in pain or crisis, so we have no mental map for it, and consequently most of us deny, freeze of panic when faced with catastrophe. He offers up story after story of horrible deaths, freak accidents and astonishing survival stories and all the while I'm reading this thinking 'I'd be dead right now. When the tree falls on my leg, I'm lying down to die right there'; it's depressingly revealing.
I bought this book for $2 at a garage sale, which is an unprecedented sum given it had no slipcover. With no slipcover I had no cues to follow, no back blurb, no subtle dance of graphics and typeface to lure me in, so the few paragraphs I browsed in the garage were mighty persuasive.
Gonzales writes about why some people live through great adversity, and some don't. There is a lot to say about this book, but here's a little bit that gave me pause:
"Most people operate in an environment of such low risk that action, inaction, or the vicissitudes of brains have few consequences... Mistakes spend themselves harmlessly and dies out unnoticed instead of growing out of control." And isn't that the decription of a Sydney marketing manager's life mode?
Gonzales says most people don't get any practice in pain or crisis, so we have no mental map for it, and consequently most of us deny, freeze of panic when faced with catastrophe. He offers up story after story of horrible deaths, freak accidents and astonishing survival stories and all the while I'm reading this thinking 'I'd be dead right now. When the tree falls on my leg, I'm lying down to die right there'; it's depressingly revealing.
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