![]() ![]() I really am not sure, and I like hanging out in that space. Maybe letting someone go can be a kinder process if we get to see a little of them in ourselves. As the nurse mentioned, about 15% of people decide the surgery is a little too drastic for them overall and they turn to cosmetics for a more subdued honor. I err on the side of dealing with things the way you uniquely need to deal with them. ![]() This story might be a critique of not being able to fully let someone go and perhaps going to great lengths to preserve someone instead of letting them go.it MIGHT be. Loss is dramatic, especially when we lose someone that made us whole. Surgical alteration is dramatic, but that’s kind of the point. Learning about Day of the Dead in Spanish class was so cool, but a little sad in realizing just how severed my culture is from its dead. I personally think my culture is lacking in the art-we've sanitized loss too much, or run from it altogether. It’s so lovely and flows so perfectly in its familiarity.Įvery single culture has a way of looking back at their lost loved ones. Really great futuristic take on body modification in congress with heritage and ancestral honor. ![]() ![]() It’s LeVar Burton Reads season 9, and I’m doing a post-semester catch up with “Tía Abuela’s Face, Ten Ways” by Lisa M. It’s like Tia Abuela is looking up at me from a rippling pond.” **spoilers** 3.5⭐ “I can see my eyes are darker than before. ![]()
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