“When my best friends had babies we were lucky that our friendships preexisted our new charges by decades. We never forgot who we once were to each other whilst embracing who we’d become. I may not have been able to see myself after my daughters birth but my best friends never lost sight of me.” Friends Book:How Do We Know We're Doing It Right: & Other Essays on Modern Life Source: How Do We Know We're Doing It Right: & Other Essays on Modern Life
“Empathy has become a misused buzz-word. It is transformed into a catch all term for everything good as a synonym of the morality, kindness and compassion. It is frequently mistaken for sympathy, which means aligning yourself with someone suffering, not inhabiting it.” Empathy Book:How Do We Know We're Doing It Right: & Other Essays on Modern Life Source: How Do We Know We're Doing It Right: & Other Essays on Modern Life
“There are so many ways through narrative myth and the validation of social media to reassure ourselves that we are doing things right that has meant the concept of rightness has been shon of any meaning. It has become mere lip service. Rather living the right life means being in a state of questioning. It involves self-sacrifice. Making choices should not be risk free, if they are then we are not considering the right options. We have to be ok with giving up capital, social capital, online capital and actual capital. And only then we can figure out how to be right. These is a socratic saying: she who is not contented with what she has would not be contented with what she would like to have.” Choices Book:How Do We Know We're Doing It Right: & Other Essays on Modern Life Source: How Do We Know We're Doing It Right: & Other Essays on Modern Life