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Arada [10]
3 years ago
14

“So the more things remained the same, the more they changed after all. Nothing endures. Not love, not a tree, not even a death

by violence.” What does this quote mean to you?
English
1 answer:
Wittaler [7]3 years ago
5 0
What hurts most about this quote is it affects me in every aspect of my life. In an imperfect world, everything changes, nothing stays the same. Everything must excel, succeed, everyone must chase their dreams and achieve them. I wish I could just let myself relax, and enjoy the time I have while the world and even my own essence stay the same. I've noticed more and more that I've changed. The things around me that are changing are changing me too. This scares me. What scares me the most is that love never stays the same. I was in love once, and I have never felt as much pain as I did when I realized the person I loved was different, had changed. I always think, will I ever feel the same way again? Why do things have to change?

I hope this helped you.


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1. JUDITH ORTIZ COFER (b. 1952)

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Born in Hormigueros, Puerto Rico, Judith Ortiz Cofer just two years later moved with her family, first to New Jersey and later to Georgia, experiences that would inspire much of her later fiction and poetry. "How can you inject passion and purpose into your work if it has no roots?" she asks, avowing that her own roots include a long line of women storytellers who "infected" her at a very early age with the desire to tell stories both on and off the page. After earning an MA at Florida Atlantic University (1977), Ortiz Cofer returned to Georgia, where she is an emeritus professor at the University of Georgia. Among her numerous publications are the novels The Line of the Sun (1989), in which a young girl relates the history of her ne'er-do-well uncle's emigration from Puerto Rico, The Meaning of Consuelo (2003), and Call Me Maria (2006); the poetry collection A Love Story Beginning in Spanish (2005); and The Latin Deli (1993) and The Year of Our Revolution (1998), two collec- tions that seamlessly interweave fiction, nonfiction, and poetry, thereby demonstrating, in Ortiz Cofer's words, "the need to put things together in a holistic way."

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