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And, she misspells oxalate as oxylate. 2. Pessimism reigns supreme, which probably explains picador #1. I question some of the other critics' assessments of the picador lack of any real self-pity, too. It's just more insipid and veiled through a constant filter of the ongoing meter of her sexual desire and functionality. Sure, most of us want to have sex quite often and enjoyably. But she never seems to glean any real emotional lessons whatsoever from all her trials & tribulations, and that is a disappointment.3. The 'Why I Am Opposed to picador Antidepressants' chapter. While I don't disagree 100% (I've never taken them myself), her attitude strikes me as using it for secondary gains--to avoid life's other difficulties. And she even admits this avoidance to wanting to feel better, but the assumption is that it's widespread and therefore 'normal.' While it may be fashionable in this day & age to whine with semi-masochistic angst about the Disease du Jour, anyone with any degree of experience with said Problematic Vagina will probably see through the literary tactics and question the helpfulness of publishing a book that follows the herd in that aspect of medical mentality.
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