“Not only are selves conditional but they die. Each day, we wake slightly altered, and the person we were yesterday is dead. So why, one could say, be afraid of death, when death comes all the time? It is even possible to dislike our old selves, those disposable ancestors of ours. For instance, my high-school self — skinny, scabby, giggly, gabby, frantic to be noticed, tormented enough to be a tormentor, relentlessly pushing his cartoons and posters and noisy jokes and pseudo-sophisticated poems upon the helpless high school — strikes me now as considerably obnoxious, though I owe him a lot.”
More from John Updike
“It is easy to love people in memory; the hard thing is to love them when they are there in…”
“It is easy to love people in memory; the hard thing is to love them when they are there in…”
“I want to write books that unlock the traffic jam in everybody’s head.”
“We were all brought up to want things and maybe the world isn’t big enough for all that…”