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Library

I have loved libraries since I was young. I enjoy browsing the aisles, picking up random books that look interesting. It’s an unhurried space, where it is ok to relax and take your time. A library is one of the few places where one can follow a topic, get sidetracked along the way, and discover more than what was expected. (You can have a fruitful detour, if you will.) While most modern libraries are relatively pedestrian, they can also be beautiful. Some large cities have libraries housed in elaborate older buildings with lovely designs. 

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I visited our local library recently, and things haven’t changed much. They still use the Dewey decimal system, and they still don’t have any of the books I’m looking for on the shelves. (That was a cheap shot. I’m often looking for obscure titles.) There are still a bunch of homeless people sleeping in chairs, and I still manage to find a seat near someone who snores loudly. 

The snorer.

There is one change that I noticed— there is a lot more media available to borrow than I remembered. The library I visited had CDs, audiobooks, vinyl records, videodiscs, passwords for streaming sites, a service for e-books, magazines, photographs, maps, paintings, movies, video games for four different devices, board games, jigsaw puzzles, comic books, graphic novels, and, of course, books. 

It is also a community center of sorts. Groups can reserve meeting rooms, and gatherings are held to discuss new books or watch a children’s film. 

I think what I like most about libraries is that they are based on the idea of sharing. It is borrowing a cup of sugar from your neighbor on a grand scale. I remember reading about a community that created a tool lending library, so everyone could use a power washer or a chain saw without having to buy one. I wonder whether there are other ways that we could improve all the lives around us by sharing more (as they say in church) time, talent, and treasure. 

This is a very different outlook from the one I see all around me right now, where people seem to be focused on looking out for number one, even at the expense of everyone else. I think a focus on sharing can lead us in the right direction. If we are sharing a space, it becomes important for everyone to keep it clean, or it rapidly deteriorates. We just need to broaden our perspective, so we recognize the world we live in as a shared space.

The World Intellectual Property Organization writes, “William Kamkwamba from Malawi underlines the difference a library can make. Having borrowed a book about windmills from his local library, Mr. Kamkwamba learned how to build an energy-producing turbine for his village. On the strength of this experience he went on to study at a leading US university. That one book not only changed his life; it also transformed the lives of those in his village community. Such stories explain why many countries are eager to ensure that libraries continue to provide access to knowledge, learning and ideas.”

I know that libraries have enriched my life, and continue to do so. There is one near you. Why not check it out (no pun intended)?

Fruitful Detours

3 replies on “Library”

I recently heard a local storyteller talk about the Dewey Decimal system & she asked us to remember our first library visit. From deep in my octogenarian brain popped “Francis Parkman branch on Oakman.” Your dad used to drive my mother, sister Ginny, & me there to check out books. It is still part of the Detroit Public Library system – a beautiful old building. Check it out!

Libraries are cool. If looking for an obscure book. The library is part of a consortium that maybe can get it for you.

I don’t visit our library as often as I’ld like to but I find it to be a very peaceful place. I love that there are at times several people there, involved in their books or working on a project and it’s so…quite. There is an adult reading room with comfortable chairs and a fireplace in the center of the room. A perfect place to hide away to read a magazine, book or newspaper and just relax.

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