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The Paul Rosenfels Community Social Progress through Personal Growth |
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My boyfriend gave me an assigment today — to read an Archy and Mehitabel story. 1
Don Marquis was obviously using his characters — Archy, a giant cockroach who is friends with Mehitabel, a cat — to portray human types, not animals. Mehitabel laments having had babies instead of a "high life".
Real cats, of course, don't suffer when they are caring for kittens, and they don't "sacrifice" anything. They know how to take care of themselves, unlike humans who often either neglect themselves, or their kids. If a cat is hungry, she will go hunt and eat, and not get worried to death about her kittens being alone for a while and getting so psychologically damaged they will need therapy when they grow up.
Like Mehitabel, my grandma would have loved to not have children, or not so many, and she would have loved to learn and be a nurse. She felt inferiour for being uneducated — as a child under the Nazi regime, she had been allowed to attend school for four years only, and then she got crushed by having six children, and never found the courage to just say, "Fuck you all, for the next hour, I am going to read a book!"
She even felt guilty when she gave one of her children to her sister who couldn't have children. She needed to be told that this was a wonderful thing to do! After all, her daughter was still hanging out with her siblings, she was not suffering from hunger, had good parents, and later inherited their house and farm. My grandma's sister got the child she wanted, and my grandma had one hungry mouth less to feed. These were very lucky circumstances — the proverbial good luck hidden in bad luck — if you have the courage to look at them the right way, and say goodbye to traditional concepts about what it means to be a good mother and sacrifice yourself for a silly idea.
When I was studying history and literature, I fell ill with university victimization by proxy — over-identifying with the victim aspect of everything. I was so obviously shaken by the mistreatment of large sections of the medieval society that a friend said to me, "All those people who died on the pyre in 1349 would be dead by now anyway". That is very smart — I just wish she had added, "Care for the living instead, dufus!" That is something I needed to be told!
I did feel sad when my grandma died because I was still single then, and I would have loved her to meet my children and my boyfriend. But in the end, it is better I have my own life and not repeat her mistakes, just as it would be utterly pointless to go out and seek revenge for a witch or a Jew who were burnt to death in 1349. People have suffered so much, for all the wrong reasons. To be unhappy over what happened centuries ago would be wrong and selfish — in a bad way, as this is not helping anybody, including the noble person who decides to suffer.
We all feel sad at times that we didn't give more. But often giving more would have meant turning away from the growth process and betraying humanity. Everything important that my grandma could possibly pass on is still alive in me, and everything I wish I could have given her I can give any person I deem worth it.
The new paradigm will no longer be "giving back" but "giving forward". You never really repay your teachers except by helping the next generation.
— Dean Hannotte
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© 2010 Rachel Bartlett See more of Rachel's collages |
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![]() | On Cats and Sadness and What We Owe to the Dead ![]() My boyfriend gave me an assignment today — to read an Archy and Mehitabel story |
![]() | And Here There be Nazis! |
![]() | Can I Take Your Picture? |
![]() | Censorship is back! Now new and improved! |
![]() | Female Bonding |
![]() | Get Your Heart Broken Every Once in a While
I recently wrote an essay to help a girl who had led me to believe she needed some help, encouragement, and guidance. Believing she had escaped the open air gulag that is North Korea, I was pretty shaken and reminded of the damage that life in Stasi-controlled East Germany had done to me and my people |
![]() | Graduating from the Ninth Street Center [2008]
The Ninth Street Center seemed like a good idea in 1973 . . . and maybe it was |
![]() | How I Happened To Myself [memoir] ![]() On the evening of May 4th 2007, I found a stack of letters. I couldn't tell whether they were meant for me — they were addressed to a Rachel |
![]() | How to be an Important Earthling |
![]() | Human Nature and the Coming Crisis, Part 1 ![]() The first and most important belief I hold is that humans are inherently good |
![]() | Human Nature and the Coming Crisis, Part 2 ![]() Just keep in mind that we usually create a better world not in spectacular catastrophic situations like plane crashes, but in rather simple circumstances |
![]() | In Praise of Leafy Therapists: Hail the Great Books of Western Civilization ![]() |
![]() | In the Pressure Cooker
New York is a pressure cooker for human development; this city will make or break you. I don't know what it is that makes some people break, and others grow and bloom. How come some have to just leave this place? |
![]() | Is Timothy Going to be Alright?
Yesterday, while I was trying to restore data from a borked SD card, a tiny, sick mouse stumbled into my life |
![]() | It is Never Too Late to Have a Good Childhood ![]() Go buy that stuffed animal or that train set you are secretly craving! |
![]() | Jonestown v. The East Village |
![]() | My Article about Paul Rosenfels in Wikipedia [2008] |
![]() | Observations of a Supposed Former Investigative Journalist ![]() |
![]() | On Experiments in Human Nature, and the Nature of our World
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The one experiment in human nature that impresses me more than anything any professional psychologist ever came up with is the Free Hugs campaign |
![]() | On Joy and Exclamation Marks ![]() Meow! Meow! Anything on up to four legs that barks is a dog! |
![]() | Socialism and Human Nature |
![]() | Stolen Valor |
![]() | The Ground Zero Flag
One of the fun things to do in New York in September is going to The Feast de San Gennaro in Little Italy. It helps if you have seen the Godfather movies |
![]() | The Personal is the Psychological
One of the fun things to do in New York in September is going to The Feast de San Gennaro in Little Italy. It helps if you have seen the Godfather movies |
![]() | The Pursuit of Happiness
I was born into a giant work camp. In general, you were raised to work as hard as you can ("from each according to his abilities"), only enjoy what was justifiable ("to each according to his needs"), and not ask questions. Guess who determined what your abilities and needs were? |
![]() | To my Friends in Germany who have been Betrayed by their Representatives |
![]() | What the Confederate Flag Means to Me |
![]() | Why Good People do Bad Things
Do you actually do good in the world, or are you merely very, very convinced of your own good intentions? |
![]() | Why We Need Paul Rosenfels
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Question: If polarity is just the way humans are, why do we need to study it? The short answer: For the same reason we need to know about gravity |
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Truth is a work in progress.
We like our diamonds rough.
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