THE preface that is most beneficial to the log compiled by a new woman from the upper middle income is really a page by Sigmund Freud dated April 27, 1915, a page wherein the distinguished Viennese psychologist testifies towards the permanent value of this document:
"This journal is just a treasure. Nothing you've seen prior, in my opinion, has such a thing been written allowing us to see therefore plainly to the heart of the woman that is young owned by our social and social stratum, throughout the many years of puberal development. We have been shown the way the sentiments pass through the easy egoism of youth to realize readiness; how a relationships to moms and dads along with other family form that is very first, and exactly how they slowly be more severe and much more intimate; just how friendships are created and broken. We're shown the dawn of love, experiencing down towards its things being first. Most importantly, we have been shown the way the secret associated with life that is intimate presses it self vaguely in the attention, then takes whole control for the growing cleverness, so your kid suffers beneath the load of key knowledge but slowly becomes enabled to shoulder the responsibility. Of all of the these simple things we now have a description at the same time therefore charming, therefore severe, so artless, so it cannot neglect to be of supreme interest to educationists and psychologists.