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If we refuse
to lift ourselves up beyond our petty self-indulgences, why should we
ever care to see the urgency in the needs of others. If we, by being
silent, believe lies to be irrelevant, when do we then use our voices--
in crabby, verbose protestations against the interruptions occasioned by
running unavoidably head-on into inconvenient truths?
Shall our
eardrums ring with the droning of our own lethargic voices as we tamp
down the spirits of our youth with soothing, surrendering words
demanding compliance in place of courage:
“You’ll get use to it.”
In
demanding better of ourselves, what better can we leave as legacy to our
children?
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