![]() ![]() Your questions were answered, your freedom was gone … I found this unsettling … and yet, it still pulled at me,” Levy admits. “‘To become a mother, I feared, was to relinquish your status as the protagonist of your own life. ![]() While she, like many of her friends, had found someone to love, the idea of having a child with that special someone was foreign, scary even. Her “other-ness” (for lack of a better term) continued into her mid to late 20s. Instead of playing house and dreaming of a fairy-tale wedding where she united with the prince of her dreams, she played explorer, hunting the tombs of Pharaohs and seeking adventures.Īriel Levy’s “The Rules Do Not Apply” is published through Hachette Australia. ![]() Growing up, Ariel Levy didn’t enjoy the same things other girls her age did. The Rules Do Not Apply is US journalist Ariel Levy’s second book, backing up from the success of her previous non-fiction offering, Female Chauvinist Pigs: Women and the Rise of Raunch Culture. It’s also a symptom of narcissism.” – Ariel Levy. “Daring to think that the rules don’t apply is the mark of a visionary. ![]()
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