OT: I identify with.....

Little game, food for thought, whatever for the weekend:

Which one historical figure do you feel most like?

I identify with Lucretia Mott. Quaker abolitionist, women sufferage worker, and an all around strong woman. A woman who didn't take crap from anybody, basically.

How about you? Who do you identify with?

Caryn

Reply to
crzy4xst
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Anne Boleyn. I have a raging sinus infection and losing my head sounds like a sensible option.

Reply to
Brenda Lewis

Boudicca - she so NEARLY beat the Romans! She was a local gal, too!

Pat

Reply to
Pat P

Oh Honey {{{{{ }}}}}

Feel better soon!!! Caryn

Reply to
crzy4xst

ROFLMAO, because I know that feeling well!

Meanwhile, ginger tea. And toss lots of ginger and garlic into chicken soup -- they'll not only clear your sinuses, but the garlic will work on the infection, too.

Reply to
Karen C - California

I don't know. It would have to be a blue-stocking who married but never had kids, who pursued a technical area of interest...

EG

Reply to
ElastiGirl

I feel your pain, Brenda (and identify strongly.) I don't have a sinus infection but a nasty cold.

Alison PS This is a nice thread though, so to get it back on track I'd say Anne Hutchinson.

Reply to
Alison

Great thread!!

First that came to mind was an ancestress of mine, Dorothea Dix, and here's a quote that explains why: "In her life her goals were not defined, she simply did whatever would best help people." and later in the biography about her, "Later in life she commented that "I never knew childhood" (Schlaifer, 1991). This was mainly because of her parents unstable household..."

Ah, so close to home .

Larisa, still pondering over this thread

Reply to
off kilter quilter

Since Brenda's already taken Anne Boleyn, I'll take Marie Antoinette, for the same "off with her head" reason. Today the sinuses don't hurt, but it might make more sense to suspend the head over a bucket to collect all the drainage. (Today's financial advice: Buy stock in Kleenex.)

Besides, the notion of eating cake always sounds good to me.

Reply to
Karen C - California

A friend of Joan of Arc, at least until the election is over. Every time I turn on the tv someone is lighting a fire under someone else.

Reply to
weazy

Hot and sour soup

Cheryl

Still thinking of someone that I identify with......

Reply to
Cheryl Isaak

Ok - I've been through my list of "heroes" - I'll take Marie Curie - she did good science and had a family.

Cheryl

Reply to
Cheryl Isaak

That's a hard one! I'll think on it - Maria Mitchell maybe?

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Cheryl

Reply to
Cheryl Isaak

And Fisherman's Friend cough drops! Nothing like 'em for clearing out the gunk.

Sue

Reply to
Susan Hartman

Is this a Madame Curie thing - except for dieing as a result of her work?

I haven't decided yet - but I like the bluestocking thing. I'm with you. I'm thinking more George Sand - with crazy thing for Chopin, friends in the music world, and other interests. Or, maybe the American woman painter whose name just ran out of my head - that showed with the Impressionist Salon - had to go to Paris because her proper upper class folks here weren't keen on her career choice. When I was young, it was Chopin that I identified with. Don't ask.

I have to think more.

e
Reply to
ellice

Mary Cassatt.

Reply to
LizardGumbo

Good choice! Madame Curie is another, but I agree -- I don't like the idea of dieing for my science EG

Reply to
ElastiGirl

Oooh. Another good one = Dorothea Dix (went to college VERY close to Dix Hospital in Raleigh NC). What about Clara Barton? Or Florence Nightengale?

EG

Reply to
ElastiGirl

I don't know if this qualifies, but for me, it's my great-grandmother. I never knew her, but have heard lots of stories and she had one of those very distinctive personalities that get handed down through the wimmenfolk of the family.

Reply to
LizardGumbo

For me I think it would be Margaret Sanger? I'm proud to report that my grandmother demonstrated with her on the lower East Side of New York. I never knew that grandmother because she died of the Spanish Flu in 1918, but I dearly wish I had. I think I would have liked her a lot.

Lucille

Reply to
Lucille

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