
I’m not scared of questions. I was made to answer questions. I am terrified of indelible markers…
Answering questions at Boston College O’Neill Library
I can’t predict the future, but my hope is yes for you. If you feel like you need to talk to someone about how you’re feeling, though, please reach out to BC counseling: bit.ly/BC-counseling
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If you are considering working through your own opinions on this question, may I recommend reading what scholars have written, reading lived accounts of people who have had to make this choice, reading accounts from history, etc. You could start with some books on the 4th floor of O’Neill in the HQ767.15 section and chat with any reference librarian to get other perspectives from other disciplines.
There are a bunch of problems with infinity as a concept. Here’s a starter discussion with a great bibliography: https://stanford.io/3OXSxzn
My friend librarything.com recommends Patrick Rothfuss, Scott Lynch, Brent Weeks, James Islington, and others. Librarything is a huge network of readers so engaged that they upload lists of books they own, so the recommendations have skin in the game: many people who own Sanderson titles also own titles by Rothfuss, Lynch, etc.
“Parting is such sweet sorrow.” Newsflash: that 16 year old in a Shakespeare play? Wrong. It’s not sweet, it sucks. But remember, we live in a highly interconnected world, full of phones, Zoom, social media, and all manner of travel. Regardless, give yourself permission to be sad. Make your goodbyes heartfelt & real, cry, hug, and above all, let the person you’re parting from know how and why you value their presence.