


Gisella Ligios: Where are you from? How many answers do you have for that? I’m from the West Coast of Sardinia. I couldn’t call that one up the other day. You can just feel the “v.” ‘Abrogate.’ I learned that in high school, it had to do with a nomination of a Supreme Court judge. It had something to do with politics in the context. The other day I could not think of ‘pusillanimous.’ It’s a great word, it’s unbelievable. ‘Arrogant,’ that’s the German word I am thinking of. I’m thinking of a German word, but that doesn’t even capture the preciseness of the English world. It’s a good English word, I can’t think of it. I remember I read it in A Connecticut Yankee at King Arthur’s Court. And I was going to name the baby Robin, which is not a name I’ve ever considered. I had this dream that I had given birth and the baby’s face started resembling an everything bagel (though I later realized it was actually hundreds of little ladybugs), and I knew I should be repulsed, but I’m like: This is my baby.

I’m at the Nürnberg train station where everyone looks like they are deflated by their life choices, only accentuated by the nonexistent lighting, as if they’re having troubles paying the electricity company.
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Sylvia Cunningham: How to avoid starting a journal with the same tired old things? I probably got bored of writing in the last one I never finished. One thing is for sure: what you are about to hear is written by humans. We’ll take you on a journey to different places and through different years. In this episode of THE BIG PONDER, you’ll hear personal accounts from people living on both sides of the Atlantic. A book in which you record your thoughts or feelings or what has happened each day, Cambridge Dictionary. I am very happy to introduce to you “The Diary.” ‘Diary’: Noun.
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