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And I (mostly) only read non-fiction because I always felt like I was having to catch up Also, I generally don’t like going to class since I generally don’t get much out of it (I have ADD), so I often skipped class and read all these interesting books while I was absent from class. When I didn’t skip class and zoned out during lecture, I’d often just read books during class. That being said, the time I spent on books is largely uneven. Sometimes, I can stare at a few pages, but then finish the rest of the book in the fraction of time it originally took. It’s hard to explain this, but I’ll give a quote from a wonderful book I read about ADD (it’s called Driven by Distraction).

I got to know her a little bit. At one point, because I was just curious what she was doing there, I asked why she chose Yale. She had followed the Grateful Dead around the Leopard Mardi Gras Nurse Nursing School Apparel shirtbetween her junior and senior years of high school. The best concert was in New Haven that summer, apparently. That sealed the deal for her. Both of us were glad we made the choice we did. Neither of us made what you would consider a mature or responsible choice. But it was very much our choice, and it worked out very well.
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Around 200,000 Indian soldiers died in the 2 World Wars fighting for the British Indian Army. The Partition in 1947 lead to the largest population migration in the title with 15 million people getting uprooted and anywhere from 200,000 to 2 million killed in riots. There was widespread discrimination against Indians, including the elite Indians, and mingling with the natives was strongly discouraged. Though the caste divide has been ingrained in the subcontinent for thousands of years, the British rule formalized and accentuated the divide. However, the most shocking part of this period was the reckless management that was a major cause of several Famines and lead to anywhere from 30 million to 50 million people dying of starvation or subsequent epidemic.

By the time he had been forced out of the Forbidden City and lost his crown and titles in all but name, Henry Pu Yi, as he liked to go, developed into somewhat of a dandy. He was a snappy dresser, and influenced by his former English tutor whom he admired greatly, tried to portray himself as a ‘perfect Victorian gentleman’. He could be charming and personable to strangers, liked to play the piano and enjoyed games of tennis. None of these things makes him stand out to me as particularly effeminate and, in his era, he was seen as a perfectly normal nobleman, at least outwardly. By his twenties, free from his entourage of eunchs, he began to ‘live a little’ and, until the Japanese courted and semi-imprisoned him once more, he seems to have enjoyed life and the freedoms his wealth and status afforded him.
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