Not the point, but, I like the way “I’d’ve” is written here. I always wondered, should it be written out “I’d have”, but be said super fast? Should the apostrophe between I and D be dropped? Surely there can’t be two apostrophes….
But, you decided here that yes, there would be two apostrophes, and it looks great. Thank you.
What they’re saying about not being “whole” is true in a very literal way.
Studies have found that when you spend enough time with a partner, your minds begin to share mental tasks. One person will remember dates, the other names, etc. This causes one’s neural pathways to strengthen/weaken to better accommodate the roles filled by yourself and your partner.
Since we lose our neuro-plasticity as we age, restructuring your mind to function independently grows tougher as well. For older long-married couples, the loss of your lover becomes something you cannot neurologically recover from. (Assuming you were both dependent enough to begin mentally meshing, of course.)
4 thoughts on “#27 – you were someone”
Jill
Noooo!!! Shit!!!!! Noooooooooooooo 🙁
Spencer
Not the point, but, I like the way “I’d’ve” is written here. I always wondered, should it be written out “I’d have”, but be said super fast? Should the apostrophe between I and D be dropped? Surely there can’t be two apostrophes….
But, you decided here that yes, there would be two apostrophes, and it looks great. Thank you.
punctuation fun
It’s a contraction of “I would have”, so “I [woul]d [ha]ve”; the two omitted bits necessitate two apostrophes, so “I’d’ve”.
Mr. Potato Patato Von Spudsworth III
What they’re saying about not being “whole” is true in a very literal way.
Studies have found that when you spend enough time with a partner, your minds begin to share mental tasks. One person will remember dates, the other names, etc. This causes one’s neural pathways to strengthen/weaken to better accommodate the roles filled by yourself and your partner.
Since we lose our neuro-plasticity as we age, restructuring your mind to function independently grows tougher as well. For older long-married couples, the loss of your lover becomes something you cannot neurologically recover from. (Assuming you were both dependent enough to begin mentally meshing, of course.)