There's a lot to say.
On the attack at the Mercaz HaRav Yeshiva in Jerusalem I feel so much my words tumble over each other and become wet with tears and broken with hearts and clenched with fists. In the end, I am sad and silent and lost.
What to write after this?
In high school we read The Stranger by Albert Camus. I liked it but then attempted to lessen my liking for it because suddenly everybody* else liked it too and when we entered college (and later, got facebook) everybody else listed it in their favorite books. Must get over my aversion to liking what I like but disliking when people I shouldn't think like the same do like the same. hm. Regardless. Today I was sent a quote by Camus. It's good-
If there is sin against life, it consists in hoping for another life and in eluding the implacable grandeur of this life.
Yesterday I made a Great Big Pot Of Soup.
Today I went to a Production, "Can You Imagine," about what life would be like after the Mosiach comes, put on by the local Lubavitch girls high school.
Tomorrow I conquer the world.
*a few people who I group together based on imaginary ties
** joke, joke, please note the sarcasm in my voice. also a joke. annnnnnnnyways.
3 comments:
I'm so in with you on this dislike to liking things everybody else seems to be liking. I think it may be a psychological disorder of obsession with originality ;). Fads quash originality.
i was one who put The Stranger as one of my favorite books on the FB! sigh it's because it delves into a teenage angst that actually sounds smart, something that up till LA's class not many of us had encountered before.
-this is iris. i haven't been keeping up with your blog but i love that you keep writing. i've bookmarked it, and will be visiting more often now.
miss you! your spring break plans sound awesome.
rachel- that's it exactly! oprah's book club has really ruined me...
i- nice to see you around :)
remember high school? oy.
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