Sometimes I can feel my bones straining under the weight of all the lives I’m not living.
β Jonathan Safran Foer π¬ #mbmay
Sometimes I can feel my bones straining under the weight of all the lives I’m not living.
β Jonathan Safran Foer π¬ #mbmay
128/366: Where Do We Go From Here?
Remember that sometimes not getting what you want is a wonderful stroke of luck.
β Dalai Lama π¬ #mbmay
127/366: π¨
126/366: The Performance
Drinking is up, exercise is down, and anger and frustration are often at the forefront of my brain. Add to that the raw polarization of our society today, and it is altogether far too wearying[…]
β Do. The. Work. π¬ #mbmay
125/366: COVID Life
Always demand a deadline. A deadline weeds out the extraneous and the ordinary. It prevents you from trying to make it perfect, so you have to make it different. Different is better.
β 68 Bits of Unsolicited Advice from Kevin Kelly π¬ #mbmay
229 years ago, The Constitution of 3 May 1791 has been adopted for Poland and Lithuania (that were essentially a commonwealth back then). It was the very first such document in Europe and second in the world (shortly after United States Constitution from 1789). Itβs a bit ironic as it happened 19 years after first partition of Poland between Russian Empire, Kingdom of Prussia and the Habsburg Monarchy (Austria) and merely 2 years before second (1793) and 4 years before third and final (1795) partition β Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was no more.
It took 123 years for Poland to get back on maps of Europe which happened with the end of World War I in 1918. There was an episode though, of some kind of country creation on the old, pre-partition lands called Duchy of Warsaw, that was a puppet state of Napoleonβs I France. It existed between 1807 and 1815 (after that everything went essentially back to where it was, i.e. Poland partitioned between three major powers of that time).
There are two quite cool things to both of these, rather sad, stories. Number one, Poland still treats Napoleon Bonaparte as almost a national hero. In plenty other European countries he is not treated as such, to say the least. He is even mentioned, tho this day, in the polish anthem:
βWe’ll cross the Vistula, we’ll cross the Warta, We shall be Polish. Bonaparte has given us the example Of how we should prevail.β
This anthem was written in 1797, two years after Poland being wiped out of existence, by Jan DΔ browski who was serving in Polish Legions of Napoleonβs army in France during revolution (it is said that Bonaparte held polish soldiers and officers in high regard).
Number two, because Poland was not existing on the maps for 123 years, the polish language was taught mainly in the underground. This brought one side effect which is that not a lot of changes/evolution happened because of that. This way modern polish kids can read almost anything from that era and understand majority (if not everything) of it.
In any cases, the Constitution of 3 May was there to provide hope and inspiration for regaining sovereignty. Picture attached to this post was painted by Jan Matejko 100 years after constitution was adopted, in 1891. To this day, 229 years later, 3rd May is a bank holiday in Poland to celebrate this special event and appreciate having a country.
124/366: Slice of Chill
123/366: Then Came Dragons
122/366: Roulette
121/366: Outside
120/366: Trapped in a Box
119/366: Feels so Abstract
hey @manton, is it possible to stop “auto-linking” in the pre/code fields? here’s what I mean: www.chbk.co/2020/04/2…
the brew install has a very long link, but it has to be long as it’s using git commit π€·π»ββοΈ
118/366: Looking for Changes
117/366: A Beautiful Day
116/366: Whereβs Your God Now?
115/366: The Birds and the Worm
114/366: I only wish I was somewhere else
113/366: Alles Wird Gut!
112/366: The Queenβs Horse
111/366: Behind the Glass
110/366: B&W Week #7