May 03, 2026
I have always imagined that Paradise will be a kind of library.
Borges wrote this while grappling with one of the cruelest ironies a writer could face: he had just been appointed director of the National Library of Argentina, and he was going blind. Surrounded by hundreds of thousands of books he could no longer read, he chose wonder over bitterness, transforming his loss into a meditation on divine humor and grace. The poem does not rage against what was taken but instead marvels at what remains, including the smell of books, the memory of pages, the architecture of accumulated human thought. To be grateful, Borges suggests, is not to pretend that nothing has been lost, but to remain astonished that anything exists at all.
Reflection
If you were to go blind tomorrow to one sense, one ability, or one relationship you currently take for granted, what would you finally see clearly about the gift it has always been, and what does the fact that you can see it now, while it is still yours, ask of you today?
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