Brainsalad
The frightening consequences of electroshock therapy

I'm a middle aged government attorney living in a rural section of the northeast U.S. I'm unmarried and come from a very large family. When not preoccupied with family and my job, I read enormous amounts, toy with evolutionary theory, and scratch various parts on my body.

This journal is filled with an enormous number of half-truths and outright lies, including this sentence.

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"Solitude" by Ursula K. LeGuin

Excerpt from the award winning novella.
Life in the auntring, or for a settled man, is repetitive, as I said, and so it can be dull. Nothing new happens. The mind always wants new happenings. So for the young soul there is wandering and scouting, travel, danger, change. But of course travel and danger and change have their own dullness. It is finally always the same otherness over again; another hill, another river, another man, another day. The feet begin to turn in a long, long circle. The body beings to think of what it learned back home, when it learned to be still. To be aware of the grain of dust beneath the sole of the foot, and the touch and the scent of the air on the cheek, and the fall and the motion of the light across the air, and the color of the grass on the high hill across the river, and the thoughts of the body, of the soul, the shimmer and the ripple of colors and sounds in the clear darkness of the depths, endlessly moving, endlessly changing.


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