June 14, 2026
Attention is the rarest and purest form of generosity.
Weil wrote this while living in Marseille in the early 1940s, waiting for a visa to leave occupied France, working in fields alongside agricultural laborers to understand their exhaustion firsthand. She was corresponding with Father Perrin, a Dominican priest, about the nature of spiritual life, and these letters became Waiting for God after her death in 1943. For Weil, attention was not passive — it was the one thing a person could offer fully in any given moment, which makes it a direct confrontation with impermanence: you can only really attend to what is in front of you right now.
Reflection
We often move through conversations and tasks without fully arriving in them. What is one person or activity today that you have been only halfway present for?
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