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My self-image is of a saturnine figure: tall, athletic, dangerous.
My self-image is tarnished, altered, irretrievably damaged.
(I buy disposable razors at my local Walgreens, but I'm a tech journalist, so my self-image is screwed up in all kinds of ways).
Similar(57)
My self-image was one of a student and a learner, and I felt like I was supposed to be done being a student, and I should now know something.
My self-image was that of a free-spirit roaming the world with verve and panache — making exciting life-choices and traveling to out-of-the-way places away from the maddening crowds of summer and school vacations.
I was convinced that the daily images of the famine in Ethiopia might have already confirmed them in the belief that Africans were incapable of feeding themselves, while my self-image was struggling to come to terms with a resentment that the face of Africa was being presented as a child with a bloated face, too weak to swat the flies buzzing around his or her face.
My self-image was at an all-time low.
That, and the fact that my self-image was five years out of date.
Perhaps too much of my self-image was formed by television in the 1970s.
And if a day ever came where I felt I looked good, my self-image was instantly thwarted as I compared myself to my teensy friends.
When I was in fifth grade, a group of boys at camp called me "Mole-Chin Nerd" for the entire summer, and my self-image was obliterated by a tiny birthmark I'd never really noticed before.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com