Monday, February 8, 2010

NEW YORK, NY: Dog: Part 1 (2/8/10)

I'm currently reading "How to Be Your Dog's Best Friend" by the Monks of New Skeete. The book (second edition) shares a lovely quote I'd like to share with you.

I love inseeing. Can you imagine with me how glorious it is to insee, for example, a dog as one passes by. Insee (I don't mean in-spect, which is only a kind of human gymnastic, by means of which one immediately comes out again on the other side of the dog, regarding it merely, so to speak, as a window upon the humanity lying behind it, not that,) - but to let oneself precisely into the dog's very center, the point from which it becomes a dog, the place in it where God, as it were, would have sat down for a moment when the dog was finished, in order to watch it under the influence of its first embarrassments and inspirations and to know that it was good, that nothing was lacking, that it could not have been better made... Laugh though you may, dear confidant, if I am to tell you where my all-greatest feeling, my world-feeling, my earthly bliss was to be found, I must confess to you: it was to be found time and again, here and there, in such timeless moments of this divine inseeing.

- Rainer Maria Rilke, New Poems,
Translated by J.B. Leishman

For everyone out there training a dog... or being trained by one.

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