asakiyume: (feathers on the line)
asakiyume ([personal profile] asakiyume) wrote2023-06-20 04:32 pm

roads that conform to the human foot

Paul Salopek, this morning, talking about traveling in rural Yunnan Province, China:
Almost without being aware of it, [we] are losing touch with the human hand itself, what the human hand can make ... This realization paradoxically gelled when I stepped over the Myanmar border into China, possibly because I had these conceptions that I'd be walking into the most industrialized country in the world. And I didn't. Instead ... not only [are] the houses all handmade, but the roads to reach them were conformed to the human foot. People were still moving between them on foot or on bicycles or, on occasions, by pack horses. And even the tools to make this environment, I noticed, were handmade.
Source: "Writer Paul Salopek started a global journey ten years ago. Where is he now?" NPR Morning Edition.

The human hand and foot. I'm not holding this up as a way everyone should live--not at all. (I want there always to be thousands of different ways to live.) I just really appreciate how this show what people can do. We're not merely catalysts for automated processes.
amaebi: black fox (Default)

Re: A lever for power, too

[personal profile] amaebi 2023-06-21 06:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Let me point out the contradiction between 1 and 4 as well.

And I left out "Your standards are too high! I can't measure up!" which also goes dandy with 4.
Edited 2023-06-21 19:23 (UTC)