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In the crowds and loneliness of big city life, unfortunately, most of us do not have the courage to take off the shirts that are put on us today. The smallest stone that gets stuck on our feet grows like mountains and seas in our eyes. We are not even aware of our own existence. Tezer, who lived through the difficult conditions of the 1960-1980 coup years, whose mental health deteriorated, and who was dragged into depression by society and her family, is known as the “sad princess” by the literary world, but she is actually the “queen of revolutions”. She has realized the revolutions of her own life and managed to become a “revolution” herself. She emerged from every difficulty like a tree whose branches are pruned, re-emerging. When she said, “I admire my self-determination”, she was reminding us that she really had an admirable self-determination; a self-determination that is controlled and never deviates from the target!