[AGL] one reason I admired Lady Bird
Michael Eisenstadt
mike.eisenstadt at gmail.com
Mon Jul 16 19:42:13 EDT 2007
I know you are not broken, far from it.
I shouldnt think that the unbroken (like yourself)
would need to be broken to project onto someone
the conviction that they are seeing a broken
man (because they knew his story).
But as you say, he had a sad expression and
showed signs of uncontrolled drinking.
Fontaine wrote:
> When I met him, I didn't know who he was right away. I thought he looked
sad
> and as if he drank heavily. But you are probably right that knowing the
> story subsequently affected my take on his condition.
> I don't think I was projecting though-that would mean that I was a broken
> woman and projected my feelings on Mr. Jenkins.
> F
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Michael Eisenstadt" <mike.eisenstadt at gmail.com>
> To: "survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s"
> <austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>
> Sent: Monday, July 16, 2007 4:24 PM
> Subject: Re: [AGL] one reason I admired Lady Bird
>
>
> > Fontaine wrote:
> >
> > When I met him [Jenkins] some fifteen years later, he was still as they
> > say
> > "a broken man"
> >
> > Knowing the story when you saw him at the restaurant, you saw a broken
> > man.
> > This was
> > perhaps a projection on your part. Could anyone tell he was broken if
she
> > didn't know
> > the story? Did he walk differently or was there a haunted or furtive
look
> > in
> > his eyes? A
> > quaver in the voice?
> >
> > Just curious.
> >
> >
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