And also to live in a time when we have the opportunity to live better and do better by each other. We’re never going to come out and have new perspectives and treat each other differently, and be different people to each other, until we actually have that emotional catharsis when we begin to crack, until we begin to really have gratitude and humility and sincere gratefulness for not having had to have lived those lives. Not realizing we are still dealing with the nonsense, and we’re never going to heal ourselves until we deal with it. We really did believe that all those whips and chains and rapes and exile and loss of language and cotton-picking and all that stuff.that we just left it behind and it’s better off left untouched, like Pandora’s box. When they think that they’ll encounter the pain that we’ve mistakenly felt like we’ve left behind. They’re scared of experiencing the emotions that one gets when one stares down their past and their family’s past. A renowned culinary historian offers a fresh perspective on our most divisive cultural issue, race, in this illuminating memoir of Southern cuisine and food. I think they’re scared of what will happen to them when they let go of certain things they hold on to out of stubbornness. In our conversation, Twitty observed, "People don’t go through the crucible they don’t experience it, because they’re scared to.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |