6 “Marcus Aurelius cautioned us to remember ‘that very little was needed to make a happy life.’”
6 “Leisure is the foundation of culture beyond the utilitarian world.”
7 “Play is the free, pleasurable, immediate, and natural expression of animals, particularly the young.”
7 “‘Children are happy because they find their pleasure in the immediate action; their movements are not means to distant ends; their eyes are upon the things they do, not vainly on the stars; they fall, but seldom into wells.’ (Will Durant, Mansions of Philosophy)”
10 “‘We run not because we think it is doing us good, but because we enjoy it and cannot help ourselves… It gives a man the chance to bring out the power that might otherwise remain locked away inside himself. The urge to struggle lies latent in everyone. The more restricted our society and work become, the more necessary it will be to find some outlet for this craving for freedom.’ (Roger Bannister, Four Minute Mile)”
11 “It is the wholeness of the person that is important. Modern living encourages fragmentation.”
11 “Few are the opportunities today for craftsmen to complete the world cycle from raw material to finished product.”
17 “In a society where goods and services are mass-produced, there may be a rebirth of craftsmanship–a premium on creative hands as well as creative minds. We know that the man of tomorrow will be interested in the open road, the open air-lane, and open space.”
18 “Jay Nash might have been right when he said that our twentieth-century epitaph may turn out to be ‘They thought they could buy it.’”
29 “To both the preacher and the architect, one dealing with the souls of men and the other with brick and mortar, it was apparent, as it has been to all sound thinkers and leaders in the past, that in the end it is only what happens to people that counts. It is people and not things that ultimately and consistently permeate our existence.”
47 “Looking upon art as an insight into reality, Plato thought of it as an eternal and changeless thing which came through a kind of spiritual ascent; Schopenhauer considered it contemplation, and Croce believed it to be intuition. Schiller, Spencer, and Groos viewed it as play, thereby providing a genetic theory in emphasizing the action in art and by seeing the function of art in the larger control of life. Tolstoi, who felt that art was the language of feeling, along with Santayana, who made the distinction between the pleasures of the senses and the pleasures traceable to beauty, joined with Parker and his view in interpreting art as an expression of feeling and desire.”
48 “If art is our imagination, however regulated and controlled, which emerges in an aesthetic form through the process of organic evolution, it is not only related to play, it is play.”
49 “Unfortunately, over the years, we have gotten away from the real meaning of recreation and have come to associate it not with what it originally was, and really is–living creatively, over and over again–but rather with the shallower pursuits of amusement and frivolity. We have come to misuse the term so often that there are still many people who think there are engaged in it only if something is being done for them rather than by them.”
51 “Beauty is the yearning of the heart.”
52 “Technology which, through the exploitation of our natural resources, has often destroyed beauty could be directed toward creating it. For example, our advanced devices in communication and transportation should bring us more opportunities for aesthetic experience, not substitute for them. They should whisk us to the scenic wonderlands, the renowned art galleries, and the great music festivals of the world–or bring them to us. They should help us participate. It is not enough to just see and hear. We must do. When we are ingenious enough to make the things which produced the organization man contribute to the stature of creative man, we shall discover that we have in technology and science a sleeping giant for aesthetic enrichment.”
53 “To create beauty is a joyous and satisfying experience. But to create beauty and share it, too, is the zenith of personal accomplishment–and its own reward. It is the sharing aspect of art that places a high premium on leisure.”
54 “Beauty and the love of it are the hopes for a civilization torn by sharp differences in political ideologies, bent upon brassy distractions, and a growing part of it surfeited with a free time it is ill-equipped to use. Why do we not seek more beauty in the recreative use of our leisure? We won’t find it in the rigid, conforming world of work, but in the free expressive atmosphere of play: in nature, in the plant and animal life around us, in the land and sea below and the sky above; in the music we create or in that which is created for us; in painting, sculpture, and the dance, in the precision, coordination, and the challenge of sports in all of their forms; in the written and spoken word–the means to that most beautiful of a human possibilities, a beautiful relationship between people, sharing their work and their leisure.”
55 “‘Only those who take leisurely what the people of the world are busy about can be busy about what the people of the world take leisurely.’ (Chang Ch’ao)”
76 “Leisure is a permanently fertile ground for self-realization.”
79 “Perhaps it is not so much adding years to life, but adding life to years which should draw our attention.”
81 “‘…Physical and mental take-it-easy-ism deprive human life of most of its higher values and incentives. It leads to unimaginative boredom and breeds addiction to cheap entertainment and to the various commercially available substitutes for mental stability and spiritual creativeness.’ (Dr. Wilhelm Raab)”
96 “Our task is to discover and help the talents of children.”
97 “It is not enough to read, study, and be moved by Shakespeare’s dramas. We should also ‘act’ them, ‘live’ them. To stimulate a young person and then deny him the opportunity to respond in action is frustrating and inhibiting. If we are to educate for leisure, we must provide the opportunity to translate what we learn into action.”
103 “Exploring comes naturally to youngsters because they love adventure–the action of looking, trying, risking.”
114 “Words are not enough. Common experiences expedite understanding. Through mutually satisfying, shared experiences the gaps of not understanding or misunderstanding can often be bridged. This is because mutual understanding depends as much upon the heart as it does upon the head, as much as personal interest as upon personal energy, and as much upon the drive for self-expression as upon the desire for self-recognition.”
115 “The Whole Man.
In the end, however, only the individual can make his life daring, zestful, exciting, and adventuresome. Only he can put his life together in new patterns and images. The enthusiasms, the aspirations, and the intensities of purpose come at high tide when they come from within us. Somebody else can teach us how to address the golf ball, but we have to hit it.
If there is a key to satisfying living, it is not easily found. We can only hope, even though we may be unable to define it, that when we come upon it, we can recognize it. Surely it is, to some degree at least, to be found along the path of humility and the realization that much as we want to be at the center of the good and sparking world, we are only an infinitesimal part of a larger pattern. We are only somebody in relation to somebody else, only something in relation to something else. If we expect too much, we shall inevitably clash with the expectations of others. The road to happiness (which is many things) must be to some extent along the route of affection given and service rendered, in using our capacities to grow, in knowing and preserving beauty, and in not abusing our bodies and minds or dissipating our energies. A key might also be found in the feeling of kinship toward all living things–including man–and in the inner man in tune with his universe. For leisure out to be the time for cultivating ourselves in the whole of creation. It is the life often contemptuous of worldly success and characterized more by simplicity than by luxury, more by understanding than by monetary gain.”