It’s time to write the follow up to this fairy tale in which some of the anti-drinkers, anti-hatters, and anti-hoppers joined with the normies and wrote articles, and held festivals, and sang songs, and planted seeds, and created parallel communities, and raised their children to believe that they no longer needed potions made by witches…
It’s time to write the follow up to this fairy tale in which some of the anti-drinkers, anti-hatters, and anti-hoppers joined with the normies and wrote articles, and held festivals, and sang songs, and planted seeds, and created parallel communities, and raised their children to believe that they no longer needed potions made by witches because their relationship with nature and vapors had changed.
It’s time to write the follow up to this fairy tale in which some of the anti-drinkers, anti-hatters, and anti-hoppers joined with the normies and wrote articles, and held festivals, and sang songs, and planted seeds, and created parallel communities, and raised their children to believe that they no longer needed potions made by witches because their relationship with nature and vapors had changed.
This was a lovely read, thank you, Margaret.
Haha, fabulous idea! I can’t remember if I told you about this already, but I did write a counterpoint to this fairy tale here:
• “A Very Boring Story About What Could Have Been in Under 200 Words” (https://margaretannaalice.substack.com/p/early-blooming-parentheses-a-very)