Tag Archives: ideals on the cheap
Mystical Merger and Me
Once childhood’s unproblematic days were gone forever, I had to face the question of how to orient myself as a young girl. For some, as I gathered from pamphlets with titles like “Growing Up and Liking It” — that particular … Continue reading →
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Tagged adolescence, American adolescence, anti-romantic views, authenticity and self-responsibility, bodies and souls, childhood days, convergence of souls, Dorothy Day’s The Long Loneliness, erotic peak experiences, European adolescence, European vs American teenage, false hopes, famous saint, fulfillment, Gandhi, Gandhi’s The Story of My Experiments with Truth, Gandhi’s work in English, good faith, great lover, growing up, growing up and liking it, Hemingway’s For Whom the Bell Tolls, hope and hopelessness, human desire, idealism and cynicism, ideals and delusions, ideals on the cheap, ideals that cost nothing, impending womanhood, life ambitions, life ambitions frustrated, life goals, life ideals, life illusions, life purposes, merging with the Absolute, modern ideals, modern illusions, mystical fulfillment, mystical fulfillment and social poise, mystical merger, mystical vs sexual merger, nonviolence, novels vs real life, overcoming separateness, politician trying to be a saint, religion and social know-how, romantic ideal, sainthood, sainthood as life ambition, saints and celibacy, saints and their God, secular ideals, secular illusions, seduction and modernism, sex when the earth moves, sexual self-realization, spiritual autobiographies, teenage miseries, teenage social success, teenage wallflowers, the Catholic Worker movement, true love, twentieth-century ideals, youthful life ideals
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