@kicks That’s a lovely passage. Hadn’t ever thought of benevolent vs. ferocious irony, but now I can’t stop thinking about it. Thank you for sharing.
I definitely like both kinds of irony—and perhaps there are both kinds of
sincerity, too, of course. I like the quote and the whole book wrapped around
it.
Your description of your cat today is fantastic. I’ve dealt with a lot of
emotional pain in recent years (due to the deaths of many family members and
children in my life) and nothing helps more than physical closeness like
this—a ‘hug’ or holding the hand of the 86-year-old woman who lives across
from me. But also laughter—if someone can make me laugh, it will reset
everything. Having a ‘first responder’ who is light-hearted is great. I’m
grateful that simple things can do good work confronting dark, heavy terrors.
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Reply: Irony Cont’d
I definitely like both kinds of irony—and perhaps there are both kinds of sincerity, too, of course. I like the quote and the whole book wrapped around it.
Your description of your cat today is fantastic. I’ve dealt with a lot of emotional pain in recent years (due to the deaths of many family members and children in my life) and nothing helps more than physical closeness like this—a ‘hug’ or holding the hand of the 86-year-old woman who lives across from me. But also laughter—if someone can make me laugh, it will reset everything. Having a ‘first responder’ who is light-hearted is great. I’m grateful that simple things can do good work confronting dark, heavy terrors.