Citizens of the world

Vincent Van Patten
The Post-Grad Survival Guide
3 min readMar 8, 2019

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To be transported by the words on the page,

An escape from reality

Into the unknown

Through the eyes of someone new, a window

Into a world connected through time.

The place we stand, that which we see everyday

We hardly know.

Longing for something different,

The subtleties before us

Become obstructed by our perception of beauty

Through the page

We become explorers, vagabonds of an unfamiliar epoch.

To walk those streets, see those spires

As if mountains before us,

Reachable

How to get there and touch this incorporeal place,

By looking back

We too seem immemorial.

Our page will turn if set in ink,

Citizens of the world.

When I look at the books on my shelf, it isn’t always the content of each book that comes to mind. I often imagine where I was when I read it, who I was, what I was going through. Books are powerful in this way. We can take them with us anywhere, a companion to help make sense of the world in which we live.

Michel de Montaigne, a free thinker of sixteenth-century France gave up a life of aristocracy to “devote himself more than any other to the sublime art of living: rester soi-même”, writes Stefan Zweig in his biography of Montaigne.

After a life of courtship and working to please others, Montaigne simply wanted to retreat to his tower and read in peace. Montaigne believed in the profound energy of books, the ability they have to connect us to anyone or anyplace in history. To him, reading wasn’t about memorizing facts and dates to appear scholarly to others. Rather, it is the “human and emotional element contained in the book”.

Through reading, we can imagine a world of five-hundred years ago on the cobblestone streets of Bordeaux with the Essais of Michel de Montaigne in our hand, a sense of curiosity sending us down a rabbit hole of exploration as it did for him. That’s what makes reading wonderful.

Montaigne is an example that we don’t have to be extraordinary to make something meaningful. Montaigne just wanted to escape the brutality of his world and discover who he was, just as many of us do. Life’s a journey where reading, connecting and relating to history can often be just what we need to understand why we’re here now, as we are.

Montaigne wrote his famous Essais not to become famous or wealthy. He longed to understand the subtlety of living, the art of the everyday, not one to merely endure life, Montaigne wanted to live. Books, people, cultures, cities, history, life — it’s all beautifully intertwined when we expand our scope, dig a bit deeper, and look for the human connections just as Montaigne did.

Through books, through travel, through sheer curiosity about the lives of others, the world is ours to explore.

Malibu, CA

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