![]() ![]() ![]() "You saw the Parkland kids did it, Black Lives Matter, #MeToo. "The Internet has obviously been an incredible ground for social movements being organized," she says. In her new book of essays, Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self-Delusion, Tolentino writes about how social media shapes identity, public discourse and political engagement, particularly for millennials such as herself. She says the "lasting legacy" of that upbringing is a lifelong desire to replicate the ecstatic feelings she had experienced in the religion - which she sought out via hallucinogenic mushrooms and the drug MDMA, or Molly. The New Yorker culture writer was brought up in a Southern Baptist megachurch in Houston. "I am sure that you don't send your kid to Christian school for 12 years and hope that they'll do what I did: Which is have The New Yorker publish 7,000 words about how the church led me to love doing MDMA and love rap music," she says. ![]() Jia Tolentino's strict Christian upbringing backfired. "It was the kind of place where you had a daily Bible class from first grade 'till senior year." "The population was extremely white and wealthy, which my family was not," Tolentino says. When she was growing up, New Yorker culture writer Jia Tolentino attended a Houston megachurch with her family. ![]()
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