64 pages • 2 hours read
“In fact, it is the account of an interior voyage, the kind of excursion that’s hard to talk about without sounding foolish or annoyingly serene, or like someone who thinks the Great Spirit has singled him out to be the mouthpiece of ultimate truth.”
The phrase “the kind of excursion that’s hard to talk about without sounding foolish or annoyingly serene” employs a hyperbolic description to emphasize the challenge of communicating the subtleties of a spiritual or personal journey to others. The mention of “someone who thinks the Great Spirit has singled him out to be the mouthpiece of ultimate truth” critiques didacticism and further illustrates the use of hyperbole. It reflects the narrator’s reluctance to come across as pedantic or as assuming a moralistic stance in recounting his personal journey. This self-awareness frames the narrative voice as unassuming and introspective rather than authoritative or prescriptive, which aligns with the broader ideas of personal discovery and humility in the face of existential insights.
“If I can risk a sweeping observation, it seems to me that life often works that way: You ask a certain question again and again, in a sincere fashion, and the answer appears. But, in my experience, at least, that answer arrives according to its own mysterious celestial timing, and often in disguise. And it comes in a way you’re not prepared for, or don’t want, or can’t, at first, accept.”
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