Greetings everyone,
This is my first contribution online in about a decade. I've had the luxury of lurking beneath the radar of the internet. This essay by Abigail Shrier was a lynchpin to committing to a subscription of this newsletter. It appears that the work in this medium lives up to its namesake. During the past decade, I've been w…
This is my first contribution online in about a decade. I've had the luxury of lurking beneath the radar of the internet. This essay by Abigail Shrier was a lynchpin to committing to a subscription of this newsletter. It appears that the work in this medium lives up to its namesake. During the past decade, I've been writing. I wrote an essay three years ago titled, 'Reclaiming Common Sense'. I exhumed it recently, brushed off the dust, and edited it, again. I believe Abigail, Bari, and others here might enjoy reading it, and maybe providing feedback. Fair warning: it is a long, serious, dare I say disquisition on the definition of common sense and its relation to gender theory (and especially practice). Bari, Abigail, or anybody else, please advise me as to how I should proceed in presenting it to this readership. Thank you, Ty Kun
Greetings everyone,
This is my first contribution online in about a decade. I've had the luxury of lurking beneath the radar of the internet. This essay by Abigail Shrier was a lynchpin to committing to a subscription of this newsletter. It appears that the work in this medium lives up to its namesake. During the past decade, I've been writing. I wrote an essay three years ago titled, 'Reclaiming Common Sense'. I exhumed it recently, brushed off the dust, and edited it, again. I believe Abigail, Bari, and others here might enjoy reading it, and maybe providing feedback. Fair warning: it is a long, serious, dare I say disquisition on the definition of common sense and its relation to gender theory (and especially practice). Bari, Abigail, or anybody else, please advise me as to how I should proceed in presenting it to this readership. Thank you, Ty Kun