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17

Mirrors

0
terms
2
notes

on her complex, weirdly competitive relationship with her mother

Solnit, R. (2013). Mirrors. In Solnit, R. The Faraway Nearby. Viking, pp. 17-36

31

I used to go to Ocean Beach, the long strip of sand facing the churning Pacific at the end of my own city, for reinforcement, and it always put things in perspective, a term that can be literal too. The city turned into sand and the sand into surf and the surf into ocean and just to know that the ocean went on for many thousands of miles was to know that there was an outer border to my own story, and even to human stories, and that something else picked up beyond. It was the familiar edge of the unknown, forever licking at the shore.

beautiful

—p.31 by Rebecca Solnit 6 years, 11 months ago

I used to go to Ocean Beach, the long strip of sand facing the churning Pacific at the end of my own city, for reinforcement, and it always put things in perspective, a term that can be literal too. The city turned into sand and the sand into surf and the surf into ocean and just to know that the ocean went on for many thousands of miles was to know that there was an outer border to my own story, and even to human stories, and that something else picked up beyond. It was the familiar edge of the unknown, forever licking at the shore.

beautiful

—p.31 by Rebecca Solnit 6 years, 11 months ago
34

When you say "mother" or "father" you describe three different phenomena. There is the giant who made you and loomed over your early years; there is whatever more human-scale version might have been possible to perceive later and maybe even befriend; and there is the internalized version of the parent with whom you struggle--to appease, to escape, to be yourself, to understand and be understood by--and they make up a chaotic and contradictory trinity. [...]

—p.34 by Rebecca Solnit 6 years, 11 months ago

When you say "mother" or "father" you describe three different phenomena. There is the giant who made you and loomed over your early years; there is whatever more human-scale version might have been possible to perceive later and maybe even befriend; and there is the internalized version of the parent with whom you struggle--to appease, to escape, to be yourself, to understand and be understood by--and they make up a chaotic and contradictory trinity. [...]

—p.34 by Rebecca Solnit 6 years, 11 months ago