Sy Safransky
Mistaken Identity
I want to love myself the way a stubborn question loves certainty, loves it in spite of itself.
March 1991A Good Life
We were in the kitchen, listening to the radio — Norma preparing dinner, Mara studying for exams — when the bulletin came over the air. The United States had just gone to war with Iraq. Mara, not quite fifteen, looked up in astonishment. Norma put down her knife and wept.
February 1991Native Tongue
The trail had become steeper, winding past low trees and tall, dry grasses. Here and there were patches of snow. I tried to gauge how far there was to go, but rock outcroppings blocked the view: I couldn’t tell whether we were nearing the peak or merely coming to a change of grade.
January 1991May 1990
From My Notebook
The day with its big arms around me, whispering in my ear.
May 1990January 1990
Letter By Letter
Words become sentences in spite of themselves, as moments become a life.
January 1990The Man In The Mirror
On the best of days, it’s a little like falling in love; like opening a stuck window inside yourself; like taking a drug — one that’s perfectly legal, dispensed by your own apothecary, your strange and marvelous brain.
December 1989Many Alarm Clocks
Once an hour, the beeper on my watch goes off. I use it to remind me to pause and remember, if only for a moment; to draw back the veil, and look at the One who looks back, unblinking.
July 1989Has something we published moved you? Fired you up? Did we miss the mark? We’d love to hear about it.
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