2017 (39)
2018 (68)
2019 (88)
2020 (79)
2021 (86)
2022 (83)
2023 (72)
Could the suffering of all the early years of rote-learning morph in middle age
into a hobby that gave me another reason to thank life? After formal schooling,
it started as an itch that had to be scratched regularly. Once or twice a year,
I had to read some vocabulary books, not necessarily new, and often took the
exams offered there. This went on for a dozen or so years. And then, around 2019
Thanksgiving, I took the leap to start reading the American Heritage Dictionary
4th Ed.
Two years passed and the original neck-breaking pace of one page a day had
settled to a flexible rhythm to coexist with my other interests. By 2021
Thanksgiving, I had reached page 650, about one third of the tome. In my
youthful past, I would have fretted about missing the original two-year target
of 730 pages. Giving up the strict goal, however, had made the journey much more
enjoyable.
Most of what I read I forgot. Among the rest, some words were learnt after many
repetitions, e.g., pinnate, which describes a leaf pattern that many plants
share. Others delighted and left an instant mark. For example, the compact
definition of fern,
"n. any of numerous flowerless, seedless vascular plants having roots,
stems, and fronds and reproducing by spores."
connected immediately as the images of fernbrakes in the Wanda mountains in
northeast China flashed across my mind. The word fastigiate,
"adj. Botany. Having erect and almost parallel branches tapering toward the
top, as in the Lombardy poplar."
matched perfectly those roadside poplar clusters on my way to the coffee shop.
Two meanings of the recent word, fence, stood out:
"n. One who receives and sells stollen goods or a place where stollen goods
are received and sold."
It felt as if the Providence had chosen certain things to reveal to me.
The benefits of consistent learning seemed to spill over to other areas of life.
At work, e.g., I never used rare expressions to impress but paid more attention
and grew more confident anyway. After I broadcast a request, one colleague
replied the email with simply "I like your choice of words." Finding the right
words and describing a thing in more ways than one became easier.
Here are a few verses to remember this powerful feeling.
There once was a computer programmer,
Whose career was stuck forever.
He turned to the dictionary,
For a change of scenary,
And they said he came back clever.
Hallelujah!
Thank you, my friend, for reading and your hearty praises. One needs a reader to
be a writer, I once heard. I appreciate very much your friendship and support.
The 'feat,' if that is what it is, has been born out of boredom and desperation,
typical of modern mid-aged men. So have the other haphazard pursuits. To avoid
implosion, I have gone into involution, which is nothing to be proud of. ;-)
Yes, I'm going through the process of losing the ability to read fine print,
too. But this is an exciting time, after all, and doctors can do magic. A couple
of years ago, my friend L (now 63) got his lens whittled surgically and could
see better than ever! There is hope :-)
As the saying goes that Rome is not built in one day, your decades-long efforts and commitment have laid a foundation and made you soar today. Congrats and my salute to you!
I tried hard to read your handwriting, but they are too dim:)) Also your script can be retained longer with a pen (I guess you use a pencil, and an eraser:)). By the way, I cannot read such a small-print dictionary now. You still have a few years to go before your eyes refuse to read them:)) Thanks for sharing your inspiring journey.