May Reading Recommendations
This month, I’d like to highlight a few things I’ve enjoyed reading online over the last couple of months, starting of course, with a piece on the perils of reading and writing online.
This month, I’d like to highlight a few things I’ve enjoyed reading online over the last couple of months, starting of course, with a piece on the perils of reading and writing online.
Sadness drives me toward community in a way joy never has. Sadness bids for honesty, serves as my greatest ally in empathy, checks my anger, and encourages me to look at another side of the story.
I was once told the way that my eyebrows slope down symbolizes wisdom, but it looks like sadness, which might be the same thing.
But regardless of his insistence that I follow his exact instructions or else something might go Terribly Wrong, I’d come too far to go back now.
Here’s today’s morning devotion for the senior class.
When I got home one day and saw him pathetically trying to work, I summoned up the vision of the ideal wife and did what she would do.
This is a theme with guys: if you’re going to be vulnerable, you do it right as you are walking away.
One of our neighbors is a nosy elderly lady named Linda. I love Linda.
First, this is a poem to say thank you
for taking me back to Budapest.
Will Montei made me feel infinitely better about moving to college and leaving everyone behind, simply because no matter how sad and alone I felt, at least I wasn’t him.