Brian Cook's, "The Age of Miracles".

Submitted by BlueintheLou on

MGoJen has resurfaced this amazing piece. While going through a life-changing decision, MGoJen relied on "The Age of Miracles" to offer some clarity. While I hope you find what you are looking for and ultimately, your heart is what you should follow, you have brought back into my conscience this piece.

"The Age of Miracles" (http://mgoblog.com/content/age-miracles) to this day, is strikingly poignant. This piece, as it was published in my own post college malaise, struck me to my core. While I still sit in a post-college semi malaise, it still holds true, and likely will throughout my life. I just can't get over how well-written and how all-encompassing that piece was.

I apologize if using a new thread for this annoys any of you, but I wanted to say again to Brian, Bravo man. Bravo. Read it again, if you haven't recently of course.

Steve Lorenz

May 7th, 2010 at 2:08 PM ^

I can't wait until I read this article again in five years when we're back on top where we belong. We'll remember these days as the ones that forged us as true fans, and writings as such that kept us going. 

BlueintheLou

May 7th, 2010 at 2:26 PM ^

 

Exactly, I can't wait until we're back where we belong, and I read the final two paragraphs, and smile an infinite smile.

"What you build will be yours. Few in the great history of his university have had that opportunity. Everything came based on what came before. They were part of a great chain, now broken.

Those of you who stay will forge a new one, starting today. When we are done we will fix the last link to the broken chain, and break the first link, and tell those who come after us to live up to it."

pullin4blue

May 7th, 2010 at 2:08 PM ^

I like Brian's style of writing. Now that that nascent blog thing is doing much better maybe it's time to think again about the great american novel. I know I would read it. Make sure you include the Ninjas

His Dudeness

May 7th, 2010 at 2:20 PM ^

Age of Miracles is repeated at least once a week by me... to myself. I am 27 and I have a job which I was not trained nor educated to do. I work with data, not people. I never travel. I work to live and sometimes it feels as though I live to work. Sometimes it is bleak. This piece reminds me that I am not alone. I am glad others see it as valuable as I do. Biff, you are quite talented and congrats on doing what you love and sharing it with us.

IanO

May 7th, 2010 at 2:43 PM ^

I'd been lurking for almost a year when I read that post.  I had to register an account to say how great it was.

MGoJen

May 7th, 2010 at 2:43 PM ^

I'll never forget when I first read it.  I was in my office, constantly refreshing MGoBlog to see what Brian would have to say about the OSU game.  My friends and I were making the trip to Columbus for the first time the next day and I wondered what anyone could possibly say about the game.  Of course Brian knew exactly what to say.

It had been a difficult year for me personally and sports-wise, and that post completely spoke to me.  I instantly burst out crying (it takes a lot to make me cry and I don't cry very often) and just read and re-read the post all afternoon.  I printed it out that day and hung it up in my office.

WhoopinStick

May 7th, 2010 at 2:45 PM ^

For me and most of my friends, the post college hangover montra was "things didn't turnout the way we had planned, but they turned out OK". 

JeepinBen

May 7th, 2010 at 2:51 PM ^

but damn, good column Brian.

Once you write that book, I'm buying it. You could write a book called "Brian from MGoBlog wrote a shitty book with nothing good in it" and I'd still buy it. 

bronxblue

May 7th, 2010 at 3:33 PM ^

I remember reading this post when Brian first posted it and thought it perfectly embodied the malaise everyone feels when you graduate college and for the first time in your life have to "deal" with the rest of the world, with all of its imperfections and potholes.  Even now, sitting in an office doing something I am only tangentally interested in and trying to see how I'll support a family doing this for the rest of my life, you need pieces like this from Brian to just keep pushing on, to be happy you have something and to use it as a building block. 

Great work by Brian.

Bryan

May 7th, 2010 at 3:51 PM ^

It was on my office wall until the day I left to return to school, and oddly, I finished my 1L year today. It is something worth reading for all time, and why I keep coming back here.

Mongoose

May 8th, 2010 at 4:36 PM ^

There needs to be a sort of place where all of Brian's best articles are saved. Even on this site. Sometimes I just want to go back and read the best ones.

Unless there's already one of those. Then I feel stupid.

Mongoose

May 8th, 2010 at 4:50 PM ^

Also, I'd just like everyone to know that as I was on MGoBoard, I was listening to the song "Golden Age" by TV on the Radio and realized, for the first time ever, that they're saying "age of miracles" in the song's chorus. Spooky.