The Weight of Repetition
Ian C. is dragging a bin that weighs exactly 46 pounds across a floor that has been polished 76 times this year alone. The wheels of the cart make a sound like a wounded gull, a sharp, repetitive shriek that echoes against the cinderblock walls of the facility library. He is 56 years old, and his hands are the color of old parchment, mapped with veins that look like a blueprint for a city that was never built. He doesn’t look up when the heavy steel door thuds shut behind him. In here, sound is just a measurement of time, and Ian C. is a man who understands that time is the only currency that doesn’t lose its value when the market crashes.
The Power of the Limit
Ian C. understands this better than any executive I’ve ever met. As the prison librarian, his job isn’t just to hand out books; it’s to restrict them. He oversees a collection of 556 titles, a number that never changes. If a new book comes in, an old one must go. He spends 126 minutes every morning evaluating what stays and what is discarded. He told me once that the most dangerous thing you can give a man who is already trapped is a sense of infinite options. If a prisoner has 10,006 books to choose from, he will read none of them. But if you give him 36 well-chosen books, he will memorize the soul of every character.
Curated Choices
Depth Achieved
Infinite Options
Paralysis Induced
The Exhaustion of ‘Open Door’
There is a profound frustration in the modern world that we rarely name. It is the exhaustion of the ‘open door.’ We are like children in a candy store that spans 196 miles, crying because we can’t decide which sugar-coated lie to swallow first. The contrarian truth is that freedom isn’t the absence of walls; it’s the ability to choose which walls you’re going to live within. Ian C. lives within 16 square feet of desk space, and he is the most liberated person I know.
He was sorting through a stack of 26 new arrivals when I visited him last month. Most of them were thrillers with broken spines and pages missing-specifically, page 106 always seemed to be the one people tore out. He tossed a celebrity memoir into the ‘discard’ bin without even opening the cover. ‘Too much noise,’ he muttered.
Because every time I read it, I am a different man. The book doesn’t change, but I do.
– Sal (On reading the same story 36 times)
Speed vs. Substance
We mistake the speed of delivery for the quality of the destination, forgetting that the most important things in life don’t come with a tracking number. We check the status of our Auspost Vape orders every 16 minutes, tracking a tiny plastic chassis across three time zones as if our life depended on that specific puff of vapor.
The Dictionary Trap
Sal spent 416 days trying to memorize the entire Oxford English Dictionary. He only got to page 156 before he realized that knowing the words didn’t mean he knew how to speak to his daughter. When you stop looking for the next thing, you are forced to look at the thing right in front of you.
Seeing the Character of the World
Ian C. once told me about a prisoner who had written a manifesto on discarded envelopes: a detailed description of the way light moves across a cell floor between 2:06 PM and 4:56 PM. He had spent 576 hours observing something that most of us would ignore in 6 seconds. That is what happens when you remove the noise. You start to see the character of the world.
Curating the Soul
Ian C. told me he’s looking for stories where the characters are trapped on a spaceship or a remote outpost. ‘Because they show that even when you’re 906 light-years away from home, you still have to decide what kind of man you’re going to be today. You still have to choose which 6 books you’re going to take to the grave.’
The Junk in the Soul
We spend our lives trying to fill the 666-square-foot rooms of our souls with as much junk as possible, hoping that the sheer volume of stuff will hide the fact that we are alone. But the junk just makes it harder to move. It makes it impossible to see the light moving across the floor at 2:06 PM.
Lightness After Constraint
I think about the $456 million I walked away from, and I don’t feel regret. I feel a strange sense of lightness, like a man who has finally put down a 46-pound box he didn’t realize he was carrying. I don’t need the unlimited growth. I just need the silence that comes after the 6th clang of the gate, the silence that allows you to hear the sound of your own heart.
If you found yourself in a room with only one window and 6 books, which ones would you choose? And more importantly, would you finally have the courage to read them?