This may perhaps the simplest and purest relationship among us. No relationship of love, hatred and indifference. We all had a great time, truly, and we even can have it without a word. This will be very precious for the memory of my graduate school. To be honest, I feel I have changed somehow, believe it or not. But I have try to face the predicament as I take this trip and found out my real problem. The true thing is not that I learn to talk to others or stay with them with responsibility and necessity but that the easement to me and peace in my mind emerge with natural existence. For this reason, I feel less fear than before, not all are gone, but comfortable as I stay in the way I have. This time, it seems that I have somewhat perceived what Lucas does, and I feel grateful for what I have with all these things around me. I have opened my mind for so many things and met some special friends. Actually I kind of feel touched. Something you can hardly tell me in a minute and in a certain circumstance, but I let myself immerse in this community, group, and universe, something in me is growing, and it will never end evolving. Something I had figured out but sometimes it may turn back, but it doesn't matter at all. The matter is that I know what I am doing right now. With my soul, being, perception and recognition, I feel I am willing to tolerate a great many things on my own way. After I had done it, I ruminated over my problem which I had once asked about Lucas, and all that problems are not truly solved but gradually becomes disappeared somehow, I guess. Yes, I wanna cry right now. Lucas, I believe you so much.
Notes on W. S. Merwin's "Tergvinder's Stone"
Take one of your favorite stories from our course text , Sudden Fiction Continued , and comment on its characterization, narrative techniques, or other psychological or circumstantial aspects that make your selected story an evocative one. 60% Tergvinder's Stone by W. S. Merwin In W. S. Merwin's "Tergvinder’s Stone," a man called Tergvinder carries a plain-looking stone from the bottom of his drive. He does not explain much about the stone to anyone. Troubled by the insomnia, Tergvinder thinks that his problem in life can never be solved if discovering that he was still alive. However, Tergvinder does not face the problem rightly in reality. Although people around him take the stone of no use, Tergvinder regards it as his spiritual comfort for he seems to find the fellow-feeling from the stone in some certain attitude. The protagonist, Tergvinder, perhaps he does not know the illness has been invading him step by step. Here the illness does not w
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