historians will look back upon this time as "The Great I Can't Even"
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historians will look back upon this time as "The Great I Can't Even"
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undefined oblomov@sociale.network shared this topic
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historians will look back upon this time as "The Great I Can't Even"
@aeva or maybe they won't.
Maybe it'll be like the thing with veterans where they're just like "nope, don't want to talk about this at all, actually"
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@aeva or maybe they won't.
Maybe it'll be like the thing with veterans where they're just like "nope, don't want to talk about this at all, actually"
@rygorous as if that's ever happened
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@aeva or maybe they won't.
Maybe it'll be like the thing with veterans where they're just like "nope, don't want to talk about this at all, actually"
@rygorous @aeva here's the thing
it is our collective obligation (at least, whichever of us survive this) to NOT let the lessons be forgotten
generational trauma is a real thing, it's a big deal, but we have to learn to process it at least well enough to teach our kids to talk about it, or else we're on course to repeat in another 80 years
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@rygorous as if that's ever happened
@aeva *puts arm over your shoulder, turns around so we face the same direction, gestures expansively*
Imagine this: all the takes have been had. There are no more takes. We're all out of takes.
No more takes. It has all been said.
Instead, look at those three kids there, building a sand castle.
It's pretty cool
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@aeva *puts arm over your shoulder, turns around so we face the same direction, gestures expansively*
Imagine this: all the takes have been had. There are no more takes. We're all out of takes.
No more takes. It has all been said.
Instead, look at those three kids there, building a sand castle.
It's pretty cool
@rygorous again, have historians ever ever in the history of historians weaving their histrionics resisted the urge to put their own spin on something