Pat Mora is a poet, a mother, a wife, a friend, a teacher, a woman who loves nature. She has many characters to satisfy her life. Most of her poems talk about the influence these positions have on her. Everyone in life needs to balance the roles they play. In most cases, these letters can be mixed. In Patmora's poem she emphasizes the importance of discovering human identity and the real role of a person. Mora tends to investigate basic questions such as "Who am I?" (Summary 2).
First we will set up a balance between work and life. Despite the role of discrimination in sex in the workplace, the role of women's care at home is a major factor. Even women who are basically satisfied with these tradeoffs often feel conflicts. In recent Pew survey, 56% of working mothers said it is difficult to balance work and parents, but 50% of working father did the same. There is a reasonable argument about the role of government and market in finding answers. But this distracts the feminist's atrocities.
The main requirement that men must participate in modern society is that they play the necessary role in the economy. But this role is inherently unsatisfactory. Social researcher Daniel Yankelovich says that about 80% of American male workers have ever experienced meaningless and difficult jobs in the past. Only by their hard work of supporting their families and proud of personal sacrifice, they can experience their work and self. Accepting these difficulties is a true person as it proves their role as a family donor.
We all play a unique and precious role in our life. However, many of us often want to know how to live in various places, work in different workplaces, or even completely different people, even if you are satisfied with this role. In a short time, the book freed us from our own reality constraints. They took us out of our world and led to reality and imagination of others. They fulfilled the elusive "imitation" curiosity. When you experience life through the eyes of others, you will encounter different angles of the most common situation in life. Talented writers naturally evoke sympathy for their role and feel uncomfortable expressing sympathy from different perspectives. It is very unpleasant. Reading does not mean that you agree with different opinions, but it gives you the opportunity to understand them.