The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows

The word sadness originally meant fullness," to be filled to the brim with some intensity of experience. It's not about despair, or distraction, or controlling how you're supposed to feel, it's about awareness. Setting the focus to infinity and taking it all in, joy and grief all at once; feeling the world as it is, the word as it could be. The unknown and the unknowable, closeness and distance and trust, and the passage of time. And all the others around you who are each going through the same thing.

The Romans called it lacrimae rerum, the "tears of things." We call them obscure sorrows.

"I read the dictionary. I thought it was a poem about everything."

—Steven Wright

Ne’er-Be-Gone

Ghough

Fitzcarraldo

Treachery Of The Common

Plata Rasa

Slipfast

Foreclearing

Zielschmerz

Treachery Of The Common

Funkenzwangsvorstellung

Funkenzwang-svorstellung

Harmonoia

Ne’er-Be-Gone

Spinning Playback Head

Clockwise

La Gaudière

Lookaback

Etherness

Ioia

Querinous

Emodox

Hailbound

Anecdoche

Foreclearing

Justing

Manusia

Gobo

Jouska