"I'm sticking to my lesbian story she just needs to like sizz or some 26 year old graduate student and like it'll all be fine," says the author. "She thought her life was good but she hasn't had the opportunity to really reflect on it." The reader's reading of the people rocking her car at the end being her son in husband seems very compelling, he adds. 'The imagery of the father and the son shaking her to come back to being that person is pretty strong'
David and Tamler take the first excursion into the work of Haruki Murakami and talk about his short story “Sleep.” A thirty-year-old woman, the wife of a dentist and mother of a young boy, has a terrifying dream and when she wakes up, she no longer needs to sleep. This isn’t insomnia, it’s something else – she has never felt so alive, strong, and awake. She can swim laps for an hour in the afternoon and read Anna Karenina with perfect concentration until dawn. What is this condition? Is it real? What does it tell us about her past, her sense of self, her alienation from friends, family, and her role? This is a banger of a story folks, check it out.
Plus - if you had to say one word or sentence to distinguish yourself from an AI, what would you say?
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