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Mary Green's avatar

This is quite the consideration for me....on one hand there is the laughter at the restaurant and the softness of a world that can afford laughter. On the other hand, I am weeping and shaken so deeply about life, and about a world that can afford this restaurant and these considerations since I have struggled alone to raise my beautiful son who could not walk without falling down when he was 2, and 3 years old. And with out tender companionship, we managed through the years with Rolfing and retraining his legs and going to the Handicapped ski program and somehow affording 2 pairs of shoes for the times when his CP leg was a shoe size smaller than his functioning leg. And then, he became a skier and a ski instructor and now he skies beautifully down the snow covered slopes. And I am alone again, struggling with a no longer functioning right ear and lungs seared by the black mold in a house I rented. It takes so much effort, day to day even with the Oxygen canisters for when I want to go outside and walk around and look at the garden, so much effort....that there is not much laughter. Some gentle smiles. But not this kind of laughter and so part of me, is shocked at a world so indulgent that it can turn away from storing away enough energy to make it to sunset, and be like THAT. And I'm shocked. At that world. And then, at myself.

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Allegra Huston's avatar

What a fantastic post! I want to go to the Restaurant of Mistaken Orders. I need to do a bit of research, I'm sure there's a great writing prompt in there.

I also LOVE the idea of abundance creep. Your idea that we lose tolerance for imperfection is very wise. Not only does it dull our compassion, it makes us unhappy ourselves.

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