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  <author>
    <name>Plinky, Inc.</name>
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  <id>http://www.plinky.com/people/aksonya.xml</id>
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  <rights>All Rights Reserved</rights>
  <title>aksonya  - Plinky Answers</title>
  <updated>2009-03-08T12:02:59-06:00</updated>
  
  <entry>
    <id>http://www.plinky.com/answers/27705</id>
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    <title>Life can change with Breakfast</title>
    <updated>2009-03-08T12:02:59-06:00</updated>
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          <p>
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<p>
  Breakfast of Champions was the first Vonnegut book that I ever &quot;got&quot; or at least felt like I did.  :) As I begin to read it and gradually began to learn what it was that Kurt Vonnegut was talking about it had a really profound effect on me. It felt like I was literally opening my eyes. I felt like I had awoken in a different place with new knowledge about what was going on around me. <br/><br/>It is hard to define exactly why it had this effect on me, except to say that maybe, prior to reading it I had lived (have lived) a very sheltered life and probabaly a very shallow one too. It made me think about things that I probably would not have thought about at any other time. <br/><br/>I credit this book (which I first read at about 20 or so) with sort of opening my eyes to social awareness. Just in general. I don&#39;t think I ever thought about a lot of the things that I think about now. It was sort of like coming out of being a sheltered, spoiled teen and learning about the world out there.<br/><br/>It is interesting and frightening to think about whether or not this sort of &#39;awakening&#39; would have taken place had I NOT ever read this book  and later all of Vonnegut&#39;s work. Would I have become a different person? Would I have remained a sheep, who could never see past the mall, if had not been for KV?<br/><br/>This is not to say that I am now some kind of harbinger of social justice and enlightenment, just that I am an &#39;aware&#39; member of society, who tries to think for themselves. Someone who tries to know what is going on and helps whenever they can. <br/><br/>I would also like to add that I think my becoming a Buddhist many years later and the limited amount of social activism that I have participated in have probably come in some way from this book. If not for my eyes being opened, who knows who I would have turned out to be?
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