In her memoir "Autobiography of the Face", Lucy Grie tells us how malformations caused by her cancer have driven her into solitude, cruel insults, and unfortunate lives. Grealy clearly shows that a society that unduly emphasizes the beauty of a woman can adversely affect young girls, especially deformed girls. For most people, this story thinks Grealy is a way to express the pain that she can endure. Because she does not fulfill the social definition of femininity, the girl to unhealthy customs, cosmetic surgery, and criteria to drive to major depression.
Lucy Greeley's revealed autobiography is a girl's autobiography, and she turns her misfortune into a fascinating and fascinating moving narrative. At the age of 9, Lucy Gray was diagnosed as a terminal cancer. When she returned to school, one third of the chin was removed and she faced brutal laughter at her classmates. For the next twenty years she has been treated differently as "having something different" from other countries. However, due to all the difficulties in life Greeley overcomes the deep sadness called childhood cancer, permanent transformation, and ultimately ugliness, she accepts her inner self and true beauty I learned.
Lucy ยท Greeri's "face autobiography". Lucy Gray lived in a distorted self-image and more than 30 reconstruction programs for twenty years she expressed an agreement with the children after cancer and surgery to deform her jaw. As a young girl, she absorbed the fear of not being so loved and the burning pain of her companion. Truth and beauty: Friendship of Anne Pachet. Ann Pachette and Lucy Gree met in university in 1981 and began friendship to define their lives as their work. In truth and beauty, the story is not part of Lucy's life or Anne's life, but part of the life they share. This is a decisive determination over 20 years through love, fame, narcotics, and despair. That means that it is part of two intertwined lives. . . What happens when people are late
People like Lucy Grealy are not being rejected by others. In Lucy Gray's "face of autobiography", due to her ugliness she trusts how she treated her and her emotions as a child. When Lucy was 9 years, half of her jaw was removed for cancer. This article points out that "This type of experience is traumatic in itself and worsens because other people respond to her appearance" (Grealy 395). With this in mind, everyday mother told the child not to stare, as someone sits on a wheelchair, saying that the man is not "normal." If people have limited interaction with people with disabilities it is often easier to ignore or promote our goals than actually treat them as people.