Sooz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:


> Sue Hartigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
 
> There is one thing though that I have been thinking about.  When this
> incident happened her husband killed himself the same day.  Could it be
> that after she found out about this, the whole thing with Clinton sort
> of went out of her mind?  I think it would have become a very
> inconsequential thing in mine if I just found out my husband blew his
> brains out.  Then in the ensuing days perhaps she talked to both Clinton
> and Hillary (they were friends) and with all the preparations for
> funerals, family things, settling legal matters, it just sort of went
> away.  As time passed it just went further and further into the
> background.  Until it just didn't matter any more.

Hello,

I was thinking along those lines myself.  I can't imagine that anything
would be
more important to a person than the death of a spouse or child and under
the circumstances one would not be able to think about anything else. 
Even something like that which, if you believe what she says, is
shocking and abhorent. And I believe that it would take months, maybe
years, to get back to "normal" and get on with your life.  Thankfully I
don't have first hand experience but under the same circumstances I
imagine that the incident she described would be the last thing I would
be thinking about.  The word "inconsequential" is a very good
description of the place it would take in my mind under the same
circumstances.  And I don't say that lightly...I think it would be
horrible thing to to experience.

Sooz


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