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Satya Sontanam's avatar

Omg, I’ve been having some loose thoughts about spaces and contemplation lately, and reading about them in this article feels like reliving my own thoughts, just with better structure and intensity.

I just want to type out what this reminded me of.

I have a tiny terrace on the second floor. In this residential area, all the other buildings around are either two or three stories high. While all I see around are buildings, since the distance between them is a bit wider, I can actually feel like I have a private space for myself there.

I like walking on this terrace after the sun sets, because in the day lights, I just feel like losing the privacy of my thoughts, even though it’s all just in my head.

The whole stretch where I walk is hardly 15 steps on one side. Sometimes, when I take that 16th step on the same terrace, there's a light form the next building that hits my eyes, and I feel it as a distraction to my thoughts. I avoid that step completely, making a U-turn every time, with a strong urge to stay within my zone.

I feel I’ve built a special relationship with just that patch of sky above. Everytime I go on to the terrace, I first look at the sky.

I’ve processed so many emotions in that tiny space from happiness, sadness, tears, wishes, jealousy, attempts to manifest (when I first learned about it), story ideas, structuring my work stories, reading, watching something, or just catching up with friends over calls.

I often feel that the part of the sky just above those 15 steps I take on my terrace is the only thing that truly knows me in my entirety.

And I keep thinking that if we had been living in a rented house, I might never have made this connection with that part of the sky. That’s when thoughts like “owning one’s own home is important” come to mind.

This connection to space is so valuable to me that I often think back to my hostel days in Chennai a few years ago. It was a tiny, untidy space, horrible-looking, an old building, and frustratingly noisy during the day. But even when I think about that hostel now, I remember the connection I made with that space.

Good friendships were made there. I fell in love in that building, had my heart broken, processed my feelings, and understood myself better through the long, lonely walks I took on that terrace every night.

That’s why I connected so much to this line in your article - “it was a space where one could recover both physically and mentally, and become whole again.”

The contemplations I’ve had in these places have shaped the person I am today. And I keep thinking lately that true success in the AI world will belong to the person who can resist the urge for constant information and instead sit quietly, contemplating their thoughts. The more one can do that, the better he or she is placed in this ever changing world.

Anyways, It feels a bit wierd on one hand to type such a long comment, but the urge not to lose these thoughts, to articulate them and put them somewhere, is what’s making me press the send button.

Ashveen Kaur's avatar

As someone who is not able to put my thoughts eloquently in front of others (maybe due to lack of contemplation), this article is beautifully expressed. The way you knit the basis and then go on elaborating the need for contemplative spaces and how it serves as the very foundation of our society, citing references from renowned philosophers, this article really took me to a space of questioning myself about the lack of introspection at my end. Also, i agree that it is the economic or societal structure that doesn’t allow these contemplative spaces to exist in our surroundings, but this can also be attributed to the information obesity we all go through due to the dopamine hits we all are aware of. Thank you for bringing this into light! A wonderfully written piece indeed.

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