Mary Shelley, from her novel titled "Frankenstein," originally published in 1818
One of my faves in classic lit.

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Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her

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Mary Shelley, from her novel titled "Frankenstein," originally published in 1818
One of my faves in classic lit.
"could you win a fight with your doppelganger" and "would you fuck your clone" questions are fun but honestly they don't reveal nearly as much as my favourite question: could you manipulate them?
it's like. not only how well do you know yourself, but how much can you separate yourself from the concept of "you"? how far are you willing to go to establish control over yourself? can you really look yourself in the eyes and lie? and if you can, what does that say about you?
"why would you even want to do this" another great question!!
Simone de Beauvoir, from a diary entry featured in Diary of a Philosophy Student
my inner child ; I am her, grown wild.
Rainer Maria Rilke, from a poem titled "Lifting One's Eyes," featured in Poems to Night
Currently.
ESSENCE: Black Women in Sports
Rhasidat Adeleke / Anna Cockwell / Alexis Holmes / Tara Davis-Woodhall / Annette Echikunwoke / Simone Biles / Gabby Thomas / Revée Walcott-Nolan / Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone / Ebony Morrison
Twitter death watch.
Dylan Thomas, from a letter to Caitlin Thomas written c. March 1950
We hurt our own feelings by thinking we mean more to ppl than we really do.
felt this
Don't offer a lecture to a person who needs a hug.
Virginia Woolf, from her novel titled "The Waves," originally published in 1931