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Looking for birds allows me to pick up the currents and natural borders that a working life can obliterate from view and from thought.
The death of Zora's mother, in 1904, began a period she would later seek to obliterate from the record of her life.
There was plenty to obliterate, from the Boxer Rebellion to the years Buck lived in the same house with her feuding father and husband, as well as two small children, one of them compromised.
His book concerned the attempt, under Stalin, to obliterate from the Russian mind the entire science of modern genetics & to replace it by a completely fraudulent biological "theory" of heredity that had caught the fancy of Stalin.
Breuer and Freud believed that the specific motivation for these neurotic symptoms lay in the patient's desire to obliterate from memory profoundly distressing events that were incompatible with the patient's moral standards and therefore in conflict with them.
It all makes for a healthy and rowdy, if sometimes predictable, debate; what's disturbing, says Joan Bertin of the National Coalition Against Censorship, is the rising eagerness of all sides "to obliterate from public view something they find offensive".
Similar(50)
"We were obliterated from the map," she said.
"One Thursday was completely obliterated from my life," he said.
In a mere blip of geological time, 70percentt of all species were obliterated from Earth.
This much more radical ANC past is gradually obliterated from our memory.
"Edgar Allan Poe's memory is not going to be obliterated from the Village," he said.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com