I didn't say it was useful, it's just a fact. You can sit
and talk about these things until you're blue in the face
but it deosn't change anything.
The point I was trying to make is that as an individual you
can stop things from happening t you - unless it is your
destiny. It may have been your aunt's destiny to die so
young, it may have been yours tohave an aunt that died s
young. Think about how it affected you. Everything happens
for a reason, just because you can't see it doesn't mean
it's not there. For example, I had an incredibly bad
childhood but now that i have grown up and thought about it
i can see how that has prepared me for other things, it
affected me in a way that nothing else would and if it
hadn't happened i wouldn't be the person i am today...jib
jib jib..
On Tue, 9 Nov 1999 08:34:10 -0600 "Farris, Sara"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Now how is that useful? Surely ecofeminism is about more than such blanket
> fatalism tied, incongruously, with such dippy faith in individualism. I
> suppose my aunt, age 43, let toxins give her breast cancer and then let the
> cancer kill her?
>
> Sara
>
> ----------
> From: vikki charles [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Tuesday, November 09, 1999 6:19 AM
> To: STUDIES IN WOMEN AND ENVIRONMENT
> Subject: Re: leaky plastics
>
> Does it matter? Everything will kill you eventually if you
> let it. It's a question of not letting it...
> On Mon, 08 Nov 1999 22:19:12 -0600 Gwendolyn L Griffin
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > i have heard much about the fact the plastics leach toxics into
> whatever
> > food substance they are holding (incl. plastic soda bottles,
> plastic
> > baggies, tupperware . . . .)
> > that they indeed leach hormonal disrupters which are causing girls
> to
> > reach puberty prematurely, for one . . .other effects i cannot
> remember
> > . . .
> > does anyone have information on this?
> > thanks!
> > gwendolyn griffin
> >
>
> ----------------------
> vikki charles
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
----------------------
vikki charles
[EMAIL PROTECTED]