Wordplay: Poetry is good for your soul! with Benjamin Myers

Dr. Benjamin Myers
Dr. Benjamin Myers

I love this article by the poet laureate of Oklahoma, Oklahoma Baptist University’s Benjamin Myers, in which he addresses the essential question: Why poetry? Thank you, Dr. Myers, for your wisdom, and thanks to the Tulsa World for sharing it:

When people ask me about the purpose of poetry, I am tempted to respond that the world needs as many as possible of pastimes that do no harm and that, after all, an evening spent reading poems is far less cerebrally damaging than most electronic or chemical forms of entertainment. This answer, however, is unlikely to satisfy anyone. It doesn’t even satisfy me. There must be more to this poetry business than a bit of pleasantry.

Perhaps, however, the best thing about poetry is its refusal to be useful, at least in the usual sense of the word. No one has ever been asked in a job interview if she has read “Ode on a Grecian Urn.” The answer to that question wouldn’t tell most interviewers what they want to know. When we talk about purpose, we almost always are talking about utility, practicality, and — ultimately — money, yet we know, instinctively, that there is inherent value in beauty, ingenuity, and creativity. Only a fool stands before the Grand Canyon or Michelangelo’s Sistine frescoes and asks “What is the point of that?”

Here’s the rest of the essay.

Wordplay: Today’s word: Arbitrage

I love folks who leave me more informed than when I started. This morning’s xkcd.com comic by Randall Munroe did that….

First of all, look up “arbitrage”…I found:

The simultaneous purchase and sale of an asset in order to profit from a difference in the price. It is a trade that profits by exploiting price differences of identical or similar financial instruments, on different markets or in different forms.

Sound like the way parents get to hear two angles from their kids? Or maybe a real estate is both the buyer and seller agent? Or buying Canadian currency at today’s exchange rate of 1.21 CAD to 1.00US, then re-selling it back at 1.00CAD to .85US?

I know people who did all these things, in the last week.

Randall’s thought:

Arbitrage

arbitrage

 

by Randall at http://xkcd.com/