Everything Isn’t Always About You, Betsy! 

January 17, 1983

Dear Betsy;

You are sensitive to your own feelings; you indulge yourself in feelings which are always and exhaustingly about your reactions to people and events. You haven’t the faintest idea about other people’s feelings – how you affect them. You invent complications, you analyse without reason or need very simple occurrences, and you analyse with very little true knowledge of people. It does not occur to you that this is an outrageous burden on others; not friendship but emotional tyranny.

Emotional tyranny, Betsy. The rule, your rule, is: tread softly, by God, or you will disturb my feelings. It’s an enormous stupid tedious bore. You can have all the feelings you want, but the only practical way you can handle this is: cut out the people who distress your feelings and take the rest of the world at face value, the face the world presents, because everyone has enough real problems without getting bogged down in the problems you manufacture.

You have no idea why I won’t travel with you again. Because, with all your feelings, you have never stopped to look at yourself: a woman who sulks when events don’t work out as desired, who has innumerable absolute needs which are not life and death matters but your absolutes, who has to be kept happy or else by golly it’s miseryville all round.

Friendship is fun and a loose mutual aid society. It isn’t soul-picking (your soul, note) and you’ve made me as furious as I’ve ever been. I won’t have this nonsense and this tyranny. I have never had it from anyone else and I’m not having it any more from you. Try growing up.

Love,

M

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Someone Who Did for Others… 

After reading Gellhorn’s letter, I found it interesting to read this amazing story.

From The Epoch Times

 

“How Much Can One Person Really Do” 

Ever wonder how much one person can do against – well, everything?

In Nazi-occupied Poland, one Polish woman once saved 400 lives. Her name was Irena Sendler.

When Nazis forced the Jews into Polish ghettos during World War II, Irena came into contact with many Jews due to her occupation as a social worker.

Despite the overwhelming pressure of her political environment, Sendler soon joined Żegota, the Council to Aid Jews, and began to use her job as a cover to smuggle Jewish orphans to safety. After they got out of the ghetto, Sendler would arrange for the orphans to stay with other families or in convents.

Eventually, as the living situation in the ghetto deteriorated and more and more Jews were sent off to camps, Sendler and her associates began smuggling out children from Jewish families as well. She would keep track of each child’s true identity before forging them false ones, burying all the records in a jar so that the parents could reunite with their children one day.

Unfortunately, many of these parents would not survive the concentration camps. But because of Sendler, their children would.

By the end of World War II, Sendler and her colleagues managed to save around 2,500 Jewish children. Of these 2,500, about 400 were rescued by Sendler herself.

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Every Friday, Merriam-Webster posts the words that, for one reason or another, defined the week. The list was especially interesting last week. Click here to read it.

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