Curiosity and Moral Courage, or, a Commencement Address for Uncertain Times
Moral courage and curiosity means listening to yourself: where did this idea come from? Why am I moved to defend it?
Moral courage and curiosity means listening to yourself: where did this idea come from? Why am I moved to defend it?
But there was Spanish to learn.
I think for me words and voice have always been a form of presence.
The article is from the Washington Post. Tom Hanks played the Washington Post in a movie, which means it’s credible.
I have named our pop-up restaurant Le Cabine. This restaurant has everything: grammatical inaccuracy, two cats hanging around at all times, and the world’s first ever Michelin Moon.
Now that so much of my social interaction is happening on emoji’s home turf, I’ve started to branch out in the way I use them.
It’s one thing, after all, to recognize that people can be dupes. It’s quite another to believe that they must be.
I’d known when Josh and I started dating that I might have to leave. But staying was within our grasp, and it feels nice to know what your future is going to look like.
Our choices will define us. Others will too. And the mark we leave will not meet any of our expectations.
When you work with children’s books, cats are inescapable.