The Myth of Sisyphus
I'm seriously thinking about going back to Haiti over Christmas.
There is a Haitian proverb: dye mon, gen mon. It means, "behind the mountains, there are more mountains."
I am growing very fond of that proverb. And recall that we must imagine Sisyphus happy.
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Maybe we could arrange a trip together. I'd much rather go with someone who'd been before :)
An active imagination and daydreaming capacity is good!
n.
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You lived in New Orleans; eske ou pale kreyòl?
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IT wouldn't be for a couple of years probably. But, um... Yeah!!!
n.
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The 'o' in 'Mon' is about the same as 'con', but the 'n' is almost not pronounced. (If you know any French, it's similar to 'bon' in "Bon jour").
'Gen' is pronounced with a hard 'g' sound. The 'e' sounds like 'Ben' and again, the 'n' is almost not pronounced.
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Thank you!
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[*] I'm blanking on whether or not I should have a possessive 's' if the 's' before the apostrophe is silent.
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First, Camus is French, pronounced "Camoo" in English, so the 's is needed. Second, Camus is not an ancient proper name. Third, it ends in -us, not -es or -is.
I consider Strunk the authority. This is his first rule. Strunk says "This is the usage of the United States Government Printing Office and of the Oxford University Press."
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If you go and find a nice Erzulie boutey pick it for me and I'll buy it. :>
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Mountains Beyond Mountains (http://www.amazon.ca/dp/0812973011/)
If not, you really should. It's an excellent book about an amazing man and his love for Haiti (and Peru, and Russia, and really anyone who's poor and been fucked by the public health establishment).
I'm also reading a book by Paul Farmer, The Uses of Haiti (http://www.amazon.ca/dp/1567513441/), that's educational and passionate and agonizing to read.
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Let me know if you go.