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She stood in front of her apartment door with her coat over her arm, purse over her shoulder, briefcase in her right hand and her keys in her left. It had been a very long day.
Stunning. This is not fiction…the details, maybe. The sentiment? Well, one can hope.
Thank you, @9thdistrictneighbor. I think the signs are already showing . . .
Isn’t this the plight of mankind apart from God ? I would say so, though some would protest otherwise.
Indeed, @kevinschulte. But there is much more here to contemplate, too. Whose “so what” are we talking about? How do Rico members respond to the story? What happens when anyone’s world starts to crumble? And lots more. Thanks, Kevin.
More to come?
I hope so, @thejokewasonme–in terms of the watching the fracture of the Dems! From me, hadn’t thought about it . . . I’ll think about it . . .
Suzy,
In the sixties, it was the quiet desperation of the man in the grey flannel suit stuck on the hopeless wheel of the business world rat race. Well, with all that gender role switching we now have the women in the white pantsuit. She’s giving up anything like a normal life, stuck on the hopeless wheel of the government world rat race. She can claim that it is all about caring for the disadvantaged except for the fact that the programs don’t work. She can claim that it is all about compassion except for the image of a newborn baby being murdered that creeps into her consciousness.
Just another day in the neighborhood.
Regards,
Jim
Thanks for commenting, @jamesgawron. You are so right. I think the Left is only beginning to feel its own desperation, as it creeps in and drifts around their feet. They think that if they don’t look down, it will simply go away. Not this time. I don’t enjoy thinking about the misery that will ensue for them, but am resolute that it happen.
OK better than my comments. Man.
We are all apart from God, and only find meaning when we seek Him in what we do.
Excellent writing! Funny that I should fantasize AOC playing the role when it comes to TV, or maybe Kamala.
G-d willing! Beautifully done, Susan, mazel tov!
YES!!!
Good post. Reminds me of an observation by Sebastian Haffner, who grew up in Germany between the wars. Speaking of a period (under the Stresemann chancellorship) when the political and economic situation stabilized and improved, he said:
The last ten years were forgotten like a bad dream. The Day of Judgment was remote again, and there was no demand for saviors or revolutionaries…There was an ample measure of freedom, peace, and order, everywhere the most well-meaning liberal-mindedness, good wages, good food and a little political boredom. everyone was cordially invited to concentrate on their personal lives, to arrange their affairs according to their own taste and to find their own paths to happiness.
But…and I think this is a particuarly important point…a return to private life was not to everyone’s taste:
A generation of young Germans had become accustomed to having the entire content of their lives delivered gratis, so to speak, by the public sphere, all the raw material for their deeper emotions…Now that these deliveries suddently ceased, people were left helpless, impoverished, robbed, and disappointed. They had never learned how to live from within themselves, how to make an ordinary private life great, beautiful and worth while, how to enjoy it and make it interesting. So they regarded the end of political tension and the return of private liberty not as a gift, but as a deprivation. They were bored, their minds strayed to silly thoughts, and they began to sulk.
and
To be precise (the occasion demands precision, because in my opinion it provides the key to the contemporary period of history): it was not the entire generation of young Germans. Not every single individual reacted in this fashion. There were some who learned during this period, belatedly and a little clumsily, as it were, how to live. they began to enjoy their own lives, weaned themselves from the cheap intoxication of the sports of war and revolution, and started to develop their own personalities. It was at this time that, invisibly and unnoticed, the Germans divided into those who later became Nazis and those who would remain non-Nazis.
I think that in America today, we also see a considerable number of people–mostly though not exclusively on the Left–who are finding all the raw material for their deeper emotions exclusively in the public sphere.
You point out fascinating parallels, @davidfoster. Although they are frightening as well. It seems that in the absence of mission and purpose, and when people don’t get their stuff, they have to “make things happen.” They look outside themselves for gratification, not inside. Thank you.
Wow! That is a beautiful piece.
Susan, let me add my kudos to the others you have received on this beautiful piece of writing which could only have come from an author who was reaching deep into her heart for the poignancy it expressed. It put me in mind of the, for want of a better word, “screechers” one sees on TV and also specifically brought to mind the Professor, of Journalism I believe, at the U. of Missouri a while back, who screamed at the crowd of those who were protesting against her cause, whatever it might have been, that she “needed some muscle over here”! Thank you for this excellent post.
David, thank you for this information; I was not aware of the writings of Mr. Haffner now was I aware of the blog Chicago Boyz — guess I need to get out more! But, that was a very moving extract from your longer post on his book, which I will finish reading shortly. I couldn’t help but get a smile from the first comment under your review, with which, as a “recovering lawyer”, I am inclined to at least partially agree: “We may have the opportunity to see up close and personal how a state becomes totalitarian. Hitler was elected as were most dictators in this century. Socialism is a common denominator. Other common denominators are hyper-inflation and too many lawyers.”
Sincerely, Jim
Thanks for your kind words, @jimgeorge. I remember that professor; she was horrible, nasty and out of control. At some point, I’m hoping that those like her will come to their senses. But who knows?