Some Bookish Thoughts
May. 31st, 2020 02:36 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Earlier this year I wanted to do a deep dive into yoga, upping my practice sessions and studying both asanas and the philosophy behind it more. To that end, a book I picked up was the heckin' big chonker, The Yoga Sutras of Patañjali, translated and commented upon by Edwin Bryant. It took me about five months to get through it, though it was actually quite interesting. I would have admitted before reading it that I knew very little about Hindu or Vedic thought, and while I'm sure I still don't know a lot, I know more than I did! The sutras actually give very little space to asana practice, which in the West we tend to think of as being the vast majority of yoga. So it was enlightening to read about the moral and ethical codes yogis were expected to adopt, and the religious and philosophical underpinnings of yoga.
I also finished off Ursula LeGuin's collection of novellas, The Found and the Lost. She apparently was directly involved in the collection before she died. It ends with a couple of stories from Earthsea, so highly recommended there, and a series of "Werelian" tales - I think I am spelling the name correctly. They're fascinating meditations of both race and gender. There is another volume similar to this one, but of her short stories, which I'd like to pick up soon.
I'm close to finishing Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker. I'm late to the party on this one, but it's still interesting to me as someone who is constantly fiddling with their sleep conditions and sleep hygiene in search of better quality sleep. One thing I learned so far is that I am actually giving myself ample "sleep opportunity" each night. That is to say, my time in bed is more than adequate. But I tend to sleep restlessly and move around a lot, so I'm not getting as much actual sleep as I may need. Typically I get around seven hours each night and while that seems to be all right, I can't help but wonder how I could more consistently get eight. Last night I did, but I was also exhausted from having had a much shorter night's sleep on Friday - less than six hours, which is bad for me. Six and a half is okay, but seven to seven and a half seems to be the sweet spot. But I don't think I've consistently slept eight hours a night in my life.
I also learned that, contrary to what I was always told, that yes, children and young adults can and do have insomnia. Often caused by ... (wait for it) ... anxiety! It annoys me that I was always told as a kid, "You can sleep just fine, you just don't want to go to bed when you're told," or "kids don't have trouble sleeping." Okay but I hear the clock in the living room chime all through the night. But anyway, aside from being extremely interesting, I have not so far picked up any extra tricks for sleeping better. I may want to try cooling my room more, but I already try to avoid screens within an hour of bedtime, have a set and consistent sleep/wake time each day, don't keep electronics in the bedroom, and even stopped bothering with melatonin when I realized it wasn't actually helping me any. I may try to take some to Japan next time we go to deal with the jet lag, but heaven help me if they catch me with it.
Last, and as yet not cracked open, is The Gray House by Mariam Petrosyan. It's another heftychonker, but this is a fantasy novel that came highly recommended from a book Reddit I follow. There's actually a sub-reddit dedicated to discussing it. The English translation came out in 2017 apparently but the original Russian novel was published in 2009. It features disabled kids and teenagers in a large house/group home in Russia, multiple unreliable narrators, multiple story lines, and a hefty dose of that Russian surrealism I love so much. Sorry but I have a major hearthtrob for weird-ass Russian writers. And the thicker the book the better - I like big books and I cannot lie.
I also finished off Ursula LeGuin's collection of novellas, The Found and the Lost. She apparently was directly involved in the collection before she died. It ends with a couple of stories from Earthsea, so highly recommended there, and a series of "Werelian" tales - I think I am spelling the name correctly. They're fascinating meditations of both race and gender. There is another volume similar to this one, but of her short stories, which I'd like to pick up soon.
I'm close to finishing Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker. I'm late to the party on this one, but it's still interesting to me as someone who is constantly fiddling with their sleep conditions and sleep hygiene in search of better quality sleep. One thing I learned so far is that I am actually giving myself ample "sleep opportunity" each night. That is to say, my time in bed is more than adequate. But I tend to sleep restlessly and move around a lot, so I'm not getting as much actual sleep as I may need. Typically I get around seven hours each night and while that seems to be all right, I can't help but wonder how I could more consistently get eight. Last night I did, but I was also exhausted from having had a much shorter night's sleep on Friday - less than six hours, which is bad for me. Six and a half is okay, but seven to seven and a half seems to be the sweet spot. But I don't think I've consistently slept eight hours a night in my life.
I also learned that, contrary to what I was always told, that yes, children and young adults can and do have insomnia. Often caused by ... (wait for it) ... anxiety! It annoys me that I was always told as a kid, "You can sleep just fine, you just don't want to go to bed when you're told," or "kids don't have trouble sleeping." Okay but I hear the clock in the living room chime all through the night. But anyway, aside from being extremely interesting, I have not so far picked up any extra tricks for sleeping better. I may want to try cooling my room more, but I already try to avoid screens within an hour of bedtime, have a set and consistent sleep/wake time each day, don't keep electronics in the bedroom, and even stopped bothering with melatonin when I realized it wasn't actually helping me any. I may try to take some to Japan next time we go to deal with the jet lag, but heaven help me if they catch me with it.
Last, and as yet not cracked open, is The Gray House by Mariam Petrosyan. It's another heftychonker, but this is a fantasy novel that came highly recommended from a book Reddit I follow. There's actually a sub-reddit dedicated to discussing it. The English translation came out in 2017 apparently but the original Russian novel was published in 2009. It features disabled kids and teenagers in a large house/group home in Russia, multiple unreliable narrators, multiple story lines, and a hefty dose of that Russian surrealism I love so much. Sorry but I have a major hearthtrob for weird-ass Russian writers. And the thicker the book the better - I like big books and I cannot lie.
no subject
Date: 2020-06-01 03:15 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-06-06 06:11 pm (UTC)Sitting here watching one of the cats so deeply asleep his tongue is sticking out. Envy.
no subject
Date: 2020-06-02 05:13 am (UTC)i totally had insomnia as a teenager. i can't remember ever not having it, though my memory of childhood is swiss cheese, some pieces are just missing. i like to drink kava tea to settle my head before sleep; ymmv. one of the nice things about this new work-from-home life is being able to easily stay up into the wee hours and get up around 10 every day and nobody cares. if i could keep that part when we go back to the office, that'd be amazing.
no subject
Date: 2020-06-06 06:17 pm (UTC)I'd heard of The Expanse as a TV series but didn't realize there were books! I just looked and looks like my library has some of them, so I'm going to check that out. I haven't read a lot of sci-fi lately, and it was always one of my favorites.
And I happen to have some kava tea on hand - Yogi Tea's relaxation blend. I've also been drinking a Four Sigmatic blend that has reishi in it, but that doesn't seem to be as good (for me) for relaxing. I think I'll go back to the kava for a while and see if my sleep improves. I also liked Celestial Seasonings' heavy duty Sleepytime Extra, but whatever is in it drives one of my cats bonkers. He'll do anything in his power to get at that teabag, and it's less than relaxing to fight off a feline tea junkie.
no subject
Date: 2020-06-06 06:30 pm (UTC)The Expanse books are excellent! rollicking wild science-full science fiction. They're pretty different from the TV series in terms how the plot gets where it's going, but very similar in most other ways. Definitely read them in order.
"heckin' chonker" is so much cuter than "doorstop", it's true! one of my actual cats is a chonker, so I pictured the books looking like Tybalt.
I bet that tea has catnip in it. catnip is a mild sedative and anxiolytic for humans.
no subject
Date: 2020-06-06 10:21 pm (UTC)It likely does have catnip - Crowley is a serious nip-head.
no subject
Date: 2020-06-08 02:04 am (UTC)also - Falstaff is a fantastic name for a cat! i love it. i actually named Tybalt after the character in Seanan McGuire's October Daye novels, but I did so with an awareness both of Shakespeare's use of it, and of the Welsh origin of the name. i nearly always reference Romeo & Juliet when someone says "Tybalt?" like they can't fathom it. quoting five or six lines of act one scene one will make nearly anybody decide they don't want to know any more, turns out. ;)
on another note
Date: 2020-06-02 05:12 pm (UTC)love them! his voice is so friggin' amazing.
:)
Re: on another note
Date: 2020-06-06 06:18 pm (UTC)Re: on another note
Date: 2020-06-06 08:34 pm (UTC)do you remember which song they covered?
Re: on another note
Date: 2020-06-06 10:24 pm (UTC)Listening to Silversun Pickup's Better Nature album now.
Re: on another note
Date: 2020-06-07 11:09 am (UTC)I'm going to look for it!
they're such a great band :) I love their vibe.