Nora and Gordon Emerging
I am still every age that I have been. Because I was once a child, I am always a child. Because I was once a searching adolescent, given to moods and ecstasies, these are still part of me, and always will be... This does not mean that I ought to be trapped or enclosed in any of these ages...the delayed adolescent, the childish adult, but that they are in me to be drawn on; to forget is a form of suicide... Far too many people misunderstand what putting away childish things means, and think that forgetting what it is like to think and feel and touch and smell and taste and see and hear like a three-year-old or a thirteen-year-old or a twenty-three-year-old means being grownup. When I'm with these people I, like the kids, feel that if this is what it means to be a grown-up, then I don't ever want to be one. Instead of which, if I can retain a child's awareness and joy, and be fifty-one, then I will really learn what it means to be grownup.
~ Madeleine L'Engle
Throughout her long life, Nora sustained the awareness and joyfulness of a child. Her story emerges like a painting, experiences applied as paint, blended, layered, fluid then fixed.
She was an extraordinary, ordinary person.
A Wrinkle in Time is one of my favorite books.
For the Record,
This day came in sunny and blustery, a spring day, a day to work on a play.
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