Only New Ways of Making Them Felt

For there are no new ideas. There are only new ways of making them felt—of examining what those ideas feel like being lived on Sunday morning at 7 A.M., after brunch, during wild love, making war, giving birth, mourning our dead—while we suffer the old longings, battle the old warnings and fears of being silent and impotent and alone, while we taste new possibilities and strengths.

Audre Lorde, Poetry Is Not a Luxury (Sister Outsider) (1977) · Excerpt

Lorde wrote this in 1977 as part of a larger essay arguing that poetry is a vital necessity, not an ornament. But the claim at the center of this passage keeps expanding the longer you sit with it. “There are no new ideas.” A line that could sound defeatist, especially now, when so much anxiety about creative work centers on the question of originality. If machines can generate endless novel combinations, what’s left? Lorde follows immediately with a redirection that changes everything.

“Only new ways of making them felt.” The word “felt” does so much work in that sentence. Not “understood” or “articulated” or “generated,” but felt. And then the extraordinary catalog that follows: Sunday morning at 7 A.M., brunch, wild love, war, birth, mourning. Each item is achingly specific, rooted in a body moving through time, accumulating the particular texture of a singular life. The ideas may be ancient and shared. But the feeling of them at a specific hour, in a specific body, belongs to no one else.

So much of the current conversation about creativity focuses on generation: of ideas, concepts, images, text. And generation is exactly what new tools do with astonishing fluency. Lorde, writing decades before any of this, locates creative work somewhere else altogether. She places it in the body that has lived through Sunday morning and wild love and mourning, in the person who carries enough felt experience to translate living into form. That translation can’t be automated or accelerated, because it doesn’t originate in language. It originates in having been alive in a particular way, at a particular time.

The old longings, the old warnings. The fear of being silent and impotent and alone. Lorde lets these sit alongside new possibilities and strengths, refusing to choose between them. What have you felt this week that you haven’t yet found the form for?

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