I didn't know Leonard Cohen -- of course I didn't. But his loss is The Sex Factor Episode 8 Playing With The Prosprofound to me, as it is for so many, because I felt like I did.
His music affected into me so throughly that I couldn't imagine a dark moment where his words, whether I wanted company or not, reminded me I wasn't alone.
SEE ALSO: Leonard Cohen, singer-songwriter, artist and poet, dead at 82And then he became an unlikely public figure that I felt like I got to know through his Facebook page. I don't know how much Cohen himself (or his family) had to do with it, but the page's updates felt like the sort of thing you'd get from a relative.
Pictures of youth. Grainy cell phone shots. A man whose verses are etched into my brain as the paragon of elegance and sorrow trying to fix his car's engine and bending down to fix his shoes. Cohen's sense of humor was always in tact.
It's not the aspirational stuff we expect from our icons. It was just moments from the life of a man who helped us laugh and cry and cry and laugh about it all again.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Wordle today: The answer and hints for March 2, 2025
TripAdvisor allegedly censored warnings of rape at Mexico resorts
Screw it, I’m pronouncing it 'iPhone eX'
Rohingya refugee crisis gets broken down in one powerful GIF
MapQuest is letting you name the Gulf of Mexico whatever you want
YouTubers put $1,000 iPhone X through drop tests
MIT scientists trick Google AI into misidentifying a cat as guacamole
Suspected burglar found stuck in a chicken shop vent
Best Beats deal: Save $50 on Studio Buds at Best Buy
The iPhone X has been torn down to bits, here's what's inside
Camera lenses literally melted during the solar eclipse
Bitcoin price hits $7,000 for the first time
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。