Tuesday, January 20, 2015

January II

“When I’m in writing mode for a novel, I get up at four AM and work for five to six hours. In the afternoon, I run for 10 km or swim for 1500m (or do both), then I read a bit and listen to some music. I keep to this routine every day without variation. The repetition itself becomes the important thing, I mesmerize myself to reach a deeper state of mind. … Writing is like a survival training. Physical strength is as necessary as artistic sensitivity.”

– Haruki Murakami 

“Men are not my target audience.”

– Linda Evangelista 

“So you attempt to hide your loneliness in public, to behave, in fact, as though you have too many friends already, and thus you hope to attract people who will unwittingly save you. But it never works that way. Your condition is written all over your face, in the hunch of your shoulders, in the hollowness of your laugh. You fool no one.”

– David Murosek 

“Everything you invent is true: you can be sure of that. Poetry is a subject as precise as geometry.”

– Julian Barnes 

“Why is it that we talk and talk, or at least I certainly do, without somehow conveying what we’re really like?”

– Stories That We Tell (2012) dir. by Sarah Polley

“Islam doesn’t promote violence or peace. Islam is just a religion and like every religion in the world, in depends on what you bring to it. If you’re a violent person, your Islam, your Judaism, your Christianity, your Hinduism is going to be violent. There are marauding Buddhist monks in Myanmar slaughtering women and children. Does Buddhism promote violence? Of course not. People are violent or peaceful, and that depends on their politics their social world, the way that they see their communities, the way they see themselves.”

– Religious scholar Reza Aslan answers CNN’s question, “Does Islam promote violence?”  

“Things happen the way they have to.”

– Ramana Maharshi 

“I was happy, but happy is an adult word. You don’t have to ask a child about happy, you see it. They are or they are not. Adults talk about being happy because largely they are not. Talking about it is the same as trying to catch the wind. Much easier to let it blow all over you. This is where I disagree with the philosophers. They talk about passionate things but there is no passion in them. Never talk happiness with a philosopher.”

– Jeanette Winterson, The Passion 

“If no woman in your life has ever talked to you about how she lives her life with an undercurrent of fear of men, consider the possibility that it may be because she sees you as one of those men she cannot really trust.”

—Chris Clarke, How Not To Be An Asshole: A Guide For Men (2011 version)

“I had learned early to assume something dark and lethal hidden at the heart of anything I loved. When I couldn’t find it, I responded, bewildered and wary, in the only way I knew how: by planting it there myself.”

– Tana French, In the Woods 

“You see, I have this habit of turning people into poetry before they touch me.”

– valentina thompson,
(i’m sorry i wrote our ending into happening)

“You must be prepared to work always without applause.”

– Ernest Hemingway 

“but if no one ever listens, does it matter what I said?”

– Tablo, (Epik High - Open M.I.C)

“all new learning looks at first
like chaos.”

– Adrienne Rich, fromPowers Of Recuperation


“Inspiration is a byproduct of discipline… simply getting up everyday and planning, plotting, sketching, setting up or actually applying paint to a painting.”

– Beverly Claridge 

“Why does one write? For whom does one write? If you begin asking that, you stop writing! You write, that’s all. And people read you. You write for the people who read you. It’s writers nobody reads who ask themselves questions like that!”

– Simone de Beauvoir, from The Mandarins 

“A woman sitting by herself is not waiting for you.”

Caitlin Stasey   

“A woman’s whole life in a single day. Just one day. And in that day her whole life.”

– The Hours (2002) dir. by Stephen Daldry 

“God, who am I? I sit in the library tonight, the lights glaring overhead, the fan whirring loudly. Girls, girls everywhere, reading books. Intent faces, flesh pink, white, yellow. And I sit here without identity: faceless. My head aches… I’m lost.”

– Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath 

“Overwhelmed by lack of time, race of time, speed of time, I retreat into non-thought - merely into Epicurean sensual observations and desires - momentary ephemeral flashes of well being and ill-being. Do I think? After a fashion. Do I put myself in other people’s minds and viscera? No. Not half enough. Do I listen? Yes. Do I create? No. I reproduce. I have no imagination. I am submerged in circling ego. I listen, God knows why. I say I am interested in people. Am I rationalizing? Maybe it’s too uncomfortable to know much of anything.”

– Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals Of Sylvia Plath 

“Your pain is so great that probably it does not
hurt you.”

– Antonio Porchia, from Voices

“Of late, she had felt coldness in herself, and though she feared it, she loved it too, for it made her strong.”

– Catherynne M. Valente,Deathless  

“I think the average guy thinks they’re pro-woman, just because they think they’re a nice guy and someone has told them that they’re awesome. But the truth is far from it. Unless you are actively, consciously working against the gravitational pull of the culture, you will predictably, thematically, create these sort of fucked-up representations.”

– Junot Diaz 

Think about anyone who has come out as bisexual in the media. Megan Fox, Billie Joe Armstrong, Margaret Cho, Anna Paquin, Megan Mullally, David Bowie, Angelina Jolie.

Their sexuality is usually glossed over — often times, the media decides the person is either gay or straight, depending the relationship they are currently in or the relationship they get into in the future. If a man comes out as bisexual and in the future gets into a relationship with another man, people generally define him as homosexual (such as Alan Cumming). It’s important to note both homosexual and heterosexual people are monosexual and only attracted to one gender. In saying someone is straight or gay based on who they are currently with totally negates an individual’s identity.

Several people throughout have been classified as monosexual, despite identifying as bi. Marlon Brando himself was bisexual and he’s well-known as a “manly” man, it’s no surprise that people would want to erase his sexuality to fit their perception of him. Anne Frank was also bisexual; she wrote about having a love for girls and wanting a girl to date in her diaries. Angelina Jolie is one of the most well-known bisexuals and she still gets marked under a monosexual title because of her long term relationship with Brad Pitt. Yet, in doing this, people are neglecting her identity.

– Bisexual Erasure: What It Is and How to Avoid It 

“Think of what starlight 
And lamplight would lack 
Diamonds and fireflies 
If they couldn’t lean against Black.”

– Mary O’Neill 

“It’s often a matter of sitting in front of the computer and worrying. It’s what writing comes down to—worrying that things aren’t going to work out.”

– Khaled Hosseini 

“Writing is…. being able to take something whole and fiercely alive that exists inside you in some unknowable combination of thought, feeling, physicality, and spirit, and to then store it like a genie in tense, tiny black symbols on a calm white page. If the wrong reader comes across the words, they will remain just words. But for the right readers, your vision blooms off the page and is absorbed into their minds like smoke, where it will re-form, whole and alive, fully adapted to its new environment.”

– Mary Gaitskill 

“Please be aware that everyone is not out to get you. It’s so sad to watch a person ruin a great connection that has potential to grow and mold into something beautiful because of fear, or residue from the past. Learn to realize that people can genuinely love just as hard as you do and possibly more.”

– Awakened Vibrations 

“Mostly I long to do nothing. Where on earth can I go to be left in peace?”

– Liv Ullmann, from Changing 

“I’d much rather be someone’s shot of whiskey than everyone’s cup of tea.”

– Carrie Bradshaw  

“Popular culture, commodified and stereotyped as it often is, is not at all, as we sometimes think of it, the arena where we find who we really are, the truth of our experience. It is an arena that is profoundly mythic. It is a theater of popular desires, a theater of popular fantasies. It is where we discover and play with the identifications of ourselves, where we are imagined, where we are represented, not only to the audiences out there who do not get the message, but to ourselves for the first time.”

– Stuart Hall 

“The basic fact about human existence is not that it is a tragedy, but that it is a bore. It is not so much a war as an endless standing in line. The objection to it is not that it is predominantly painful, but that it is lacking in sense.”

– Henry Louis Mencken 

“In a way I admired her. I admired her lack of compunction, the courage of her bad manners, the energy of simple rage. Throwing a bag of spaghetti had a simplicity to it, a recklessness, a careless grandeur. It got things over with. I was a long way, then, from being able to do anything like it myself.”

– Margaret Atwood, from Cat’s Eye

“How shall I be nice? I will try, but I know I will be tempted to be tragic instead.”

– Anaïs Nin

“Paris is like the girl that’s rude to you at a bar at first, and then you eventually fall in love with her the most.”

– Kanye West, Vogue Apr 2014 

“be willing to move forward imperfectly.”

– Matt Perman :’What’s Best Next’
p.175 

“I don’t even know what I was running for - I guess I just felt like it.”

– Salinger, J.D.. The Catcher in the Rye. 

“Most of the time, on the contrary, we confess to those who are like us and who share our weaknesses. This means that we do not want to correct ourselves or to be improved: for that, first of all, we should have to be judged and found wanting. All we need is to be pitied and encouraged in our course. In short, we would like at the same time to be no longer guilty and not make the effort to purify ourselves. Not enough cynicism, not enough virtue. We have neither the energy of evil nor that of good.”

– Albert Camus, The Fall

“Being a woman is a terribly difficult task, since it consists principally in dealing with men.”

– Joseph Conrad 

“I am eternally, devastatingly romantic, and I thought people would see it because ‘romantic’ doesn’t mean ‘sugary.’ It’s dark and tormented — the furor of passion, the despair of an idealism that you can’t attain.”

– Catherine Breillat 

“I found that what I had desired all my life was not to live - if what others are doing is called living - but to express myself.”

– Henry Miller, Tropic of Capricorn 

“If you understood everything I said, you’d be me.”

– Miles Davis 

“Just living is creative. Every decision we make in life is a creative one: sentences we string together, the way we get dressed in the morning. Every movement could be considered dance if you really open your mind to that feminine plane of thought.”

– Antony Hegarty in The Guardian in 2010 

“I barely noticed loneliness anymore; it was my normal condition, by necessity if not by nature.”

– Rachel Hartman,Seraphina  

“The only way you can write the truth is to assume that what you set down will never be read. Not by any other person, and not even by yourself at some later date. Otherwise you begin excusing yourself. You must see the writing as emerging like a long scroll of ink from the index finger of your right hand; you must see your left hand erasing it.”

– Margaret Atwood, from The Blind Assassin 

Quaintrelle (n.) a woman who emphasizes a life of passion, expressed through personal style, leisurely pastimes, charm, and cultivation of life’s pleasures.

“There I went again, building up a glamorous picture of a man who would love me passionately the minute he met me, and all out of a few prosy nothings.”

– The Bell Jar, Sylvia Plath 

“I couldn’t bear to think about the proper future, so I just tried to make things better for the next twenty minutes or so, over and over again.”

– Nick Hornby, Slam 

“Eventually something you love is going to be taken away. And then you will fall to the floor crying. And then, however much later, it is finally happening to you: you’re falling to the floor crying thinking, “I am falling to the floor crying,” but there’s an element of the ridiculous to it — you knew it would happen and, even worse, while you’re on the floor crying you look at the place where the wall meets the floor and you realize you didn’t paint it very well.”

– Richard Siken 

“The only thing I’ve loved is nothing at all. The only thing I’ve desired is what I couldn’t even imagine. All I asked of life is that it go on by without my feeling it. All I demanded of love is that it never stop being a distant dream.”

– Fernando Pessoa, The Book of Disquiet  

“In my moon suit and funeral veil, I am no source of honey.”

– Sylvia Plath 

“I’ve lived so little that I tend to imagine I’m not going to die; it seems improbable that human existence can be reduced to so little; one imagines, in spite of oneself, that sooner or later something is bound to happen. A big mistake. A life can just as well be both empty and short. The days slip by indifferently, leaving neither trace nor memory; and then all of a sudden they stop.”

– Michel Houellebecq

“Do you love me enough that I may be weak with you?”

– Alain de Botton 

“Artists are people driven by the tension between the desire to communicate and the desire to hide.”

– Donald Winnicott    

“I don’t necessarily agree with everything that I say.”

– Marshall McLuhan 

“We live together, we act on, and react to, one another; but always and in all circumstance we are by ourselves. The martyrs go hand in hand into the arena; they are crucified alone. Embraced, the lovers desperately try to fuse their insulated ecstasies into a single self-transcendence; in vain. By its very nature every embodied spirit is doomed to suffer and enjoy in solitude.”

– Aldous HuxleyThe Doors of Perception (1954)

“I am always saying “Glad to’ve met you” to somebody I’m not at all glad I met. If you want to stay alive, you have to say that stuff, though.”

– J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye 

“If you weren’t around, I’d probably be someplace way the hell off. In the woods or some goddamn place. You’re the only reason I’m around, practically.”

– J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye 

“I felt like I was sort of disappearing. It was that kind of a crazy afternoon, terrifically cold, and no sun out or anything, and you felt like you were disappearing everytime you crossed a road.”

– J.D. Salinger, Catcher in the Rye 

“Male fantasies, male fantasies, is everything run by male fantasies? Up on a pedestal or down on your knees, it’s all a male fantasy: that you’re strong enough to take what they dish out, or else too weak to do anything about it. Even pretending you aren’t catering to male fantasies is a male fantasy: pretending you’re unseen, pretending you have a life of your own, that you can wash your feet and comb your hair unconscious of the ever-present watcher peering through the keyhole, peering through the keyhole in your own head, if nowhere else. You are a woman with a man inside watching a woman. You are your own voyeur.”

Margaret Atwood, The Robber Bride

“The Buddhists say if you meet somebody and your heart pounds, your hands shake, your knees go weak, that’s not the one. When you meet your ‘soul mate’ you’ll feel calm. No anxiety, no agitation”

– Monica Drake- Clown Girl

One day, I realized he might not exist. My soulmate, I mean.

I realized there might not be someone walking around this earth just waiting to meet me. Someone with a private world just as intricate as mine that, one day, I would get to share and be a part of and know.

And I realized I was keeping a vacant spot in my heart for this person who might not exist. That I wasn’t allowing myself to be whole because how could I be whole with my other half missing?

It was an excuse, of course. A simple view of life that would exempt me from having to put in the effort of filling myself up with the love I was waiting for someone else to supply.

The reality is this: Life is a churning, chaotic thing with no guarantees, and in the throws of the tumbling you might run into people to hold on to for a while. Sometimes for a night, sometimes for life.

And holding on to someone is a worthy thing. A wonderful thing. Something to look forward to and appreciate and embrace with your whole heart.

But the love you get from holding on to someone will never be as reliable as the love you can give yourself. Right here. Right now.

So here’s my advice. Be open to love, but don’t be empty for it.

– Open, Not Empty - John Paul Brammer

“Try to love yourself as much as you want someone else to.”

– My English Teacher   

“I must have flowers, always, and always.”

– Claude Monet  

“If you had started doing anything two weeks ago, by today you would have been two weeks better at it.”

– John Mayer 

“It’s odd being in someone else’s room when they’re not there. Especially when you love them. Every object carried a different significant. Why did she buy that? What does she especially like? Why does she sit in this chair and not that one?”

– "Written on the Body" by Jeanette Winterson  

“Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist.”

– Pablo Picasso (1881–1973, Spanish)

Etymologically, glamour has to do with magic, as well as learning. It’s related to the word “grammatica,” which was used to describe not only scholarly knowledge, but occult practices. Enchantment, fantasy, deception, etc.

““You come and see me among flowers and pictures, and think me mysterious, romantic, and all the rest of it. Being yourself very inexperience and very emotional, you go home and invent a story about me, and now you can’t separate me from the person you’ve imagined me to be. You call that, I suppose, being in love; as a matter of fact it’s being in delusion. All romantic people are the same,” she added. “My mother spends her life in making stories about the people she’s fond of. But I won’t have you do it about me, if I can help it.”
“You can’t help it,” he said.
“I warn you it’s the source of all evil.”
“And of all good,” he added.””

– Virginia Woolf, Night and Day 

“It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others.”

– John Holmes 

“Oh, God, I’m only twenty and I’ll have to go on living and living and living.”

– Jean Rhys, from Smile Please: An Unfinished Autobiography 

“The sober graciousness of solitude. The sense of freedom in being not present in another’s consciousness, not registered in another’s thoughts. Strange sensation. Like having no shadow.”

– Joyce Carol Oates, from a journal entry 

“By the time I left St. Martin’s, I could not justify myself being an artist at all, because I did not meet anyone there who was doing interesting art that was also getting through to everyday people. [Students there were] exploring apathy, dressing up in some pigeon outfit, or running around conceptualizing. My life did not allow it: My mom was getting evicted, my brother was going to jail, I’d get my first phone call from my dad in twelve years confirming he’s still alive. So making ripples in the water, to aesthetically represent beauty, just didn’t make sense [to me].”

– M.I.A. 

“The iPod, like the Walkman cassette player before it, allows us to listen to our music wherever we want. Previously, recording technology had unlinked music from the concert hall, the café, and the saloon, but now music can always be carried with us. Michael Bull, who has written frequently about the impact of the Walkman and the iPod, points out that we often use devices to ‘aestheticize urban space.’ We carry our own soundtrack with us wherever we go, and the world around us is overlaid with our music. Our whole life becomes a movie, and we can alter the score for it over and over again: one minute it’s a tragedy, and the next it’s an action film. Energetic, dreamy, or ominous and dark: everyone has their own private movie going on in their heads, and no two are the same….Theodor Adorno… called this situation ‘accompanied solitude,’ a situation where we might be alone, but we have the ability via music to create the illusion that we are not.”

from How Music Works, by David Byrne 

“It’s so much easier to write for a person in your life than to write for some imagined readership, so you write something that’s more intimate and true.”

– Jonah Paretti 

“People will leave you but that doesn’t mean it’s your fault.”


“I am always sad, I think. Perhaps this signifies that I am not sad at all, because sadness is something lower than your normal disposition, and I am always the same thing. Perhaps I am the only person in the world, then, who never becomes sad. Perhaps I am lucky.”

– Jonathan Safran Foer, Everything is Illuminated 

“Being aware of stillness means to be still. To be still is to be conscious without thought. You are never more essentially, more deeply, yourself, than when you are still. When you are still, you are who you were before you temporarily assumed this physical and mental form called a person. You are also who you will be when the form dissolves. When you are still, you are who you are beyond your temporal existence: consciousness – unconditioned, formless, eternal.”

– Eckhart Tolle 

“I finally figured out that I’m solitary by nature, but at the same time I know so many people; so many people think they own a piece of me. They shift and move under my skin, like a parade of memories that simply won’t go away. It doesn’t matter where I am, or how alone—I always have such a crowded head.”

– Charles de Lint, Memory and Dream 

“Exactitude is not truth.”

– Henri Matisse 

“our true stories were lousy. our stories were slick black things that we spit out of our mouths onto the table in front of us. we were trying to sell something. we were trying to sell our loneliness, and no one was buying. and we were getting tired of dark looming things. we were getting tired of trying to glue words onto doom.”

– richard siken, love from a distance

“The secret of being a writer: not to expect others to value what you’ve done as you value it. Not to expect anyone else to perceive in it the emotions you have invested in it. Once this is understood, all will be well. Not indifference, not apathy—but self-containment is the result.”

– Joyce Carol Oates, from a journal entry 

“People are no longer horrified or moved, they are merely interested or not interested.”

– Joyce Carol Oates, from a journal entry 

“Why is it we want so badly to memorialize ourselves? Even while we’re still alive. We wish to assert our existence, like dogs peeing on fire hydrants. We put on display our framed photographs, our parchment diplomas, our silver-plated cups; we monogram our linen, we carve our names on trees, we scrawl them on washroom walls. It’s all the same impulse. What do we get from it? Applause, envy, respect? Or simply attention, of any kind we can get? At the very least we want a witness. We can’t stand the idea of our own voices falling silent finally, like a radio winding down.”

– Margaret Atwood 

“There is an explanation for everything, and yet there is none. Everything is both real and unreal, normal and absurd, splendid and insipid. There is nothing worth more than anything else, nor any idea better than any other. Why grow sad from one’s sadness and delight in one’s joy? What does it matter whether our tears come from pleasure or pain? Love your unhappiness and hate your happiness, mix everything up, scramble it all! Be a snowflake dancing in the air, a flower floating downstream! Have courage when you don’t need to, and be a coward when you must be brave! Who knows? You may still be a winner! And if you lose, does it really matter? Is there anything to win in this world? All gain is loss, all loss is gain. Why always expect a definite stance, clear ideas, meaningful words? I feel as if I should spout fire in response to all the questions which were ever put, or not put, to me.”

– Emil Cioran, from On The Heights Of Despair 

“To reach, not the point where one no longer says I, but the point where it is no longer of any importance whether one says I.”

– Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus 

“It’s everybody, I mean. Everything everybody does is so — I don’t know — not wrong, or even mean, or even stupid necessarily. But just so tiny and meaningless and — sad-making. And the worst part is, if you go bohemian or something crazy like that, you’re conforming just as much only in a different way.”

– J.D. Salinger, Franny and Zooey 

“But everybody has exactly the same smiling frightened face, with the look that says, “I’m important. If you only get to know me, you will see how important I am. Look into my eyes. Kiss me, and you will see how important I am.”

– Sylvia Plath - Taken From‘The Unabridged Journals Of Sylvia Plath’ 

“Beauty is, in some way, boring. Even if its concept changes through the ages… a beautiful object must always follow certain rules. A beautiful nose shouldn’t be longer than that or shorter than that, on the contrary, an ugly nose can be as long as the one of Pinocchio, or as big as the trunk of an elephant, or like the beak of an eagle, and so ugliness is unpredictable, and offers an infinite range of possibility. Beauty is finite, ugliness is infinite like God.”

– Umberto Eco; On The History Of Ugliness

“One listless day followed another, with nothing to distinguish one from the next. You could have changed the order and no one would have noticed.”

– Haruki Murakami, Blind Willow, Sleeping Woman

“In every conversation between three people, one person is superfluous and therefore prevents the depth of the conversation.”

– Friedrich Nietzsche, from Aphorisms 

“A male author can write about unlikable male characters. They’re called anti-heroes and it’s called a novel.”

– Gillian Flynn on people calling her writing misogynistic in Glamour magazine, the October 2014 issue. The level of sass and taking no shit from both her and Rosamund Pike-who Flynn interviews in this article-is strong and gives me life. 

“I am not a puzzle to be solved.
I am someone to be experienced-
a soul to be tasted”

– jenn satsune 

“Music is the only thing that will give and give and give and not take…”

– Amy Winehouse, from aninterview 

“I wasn’t actually in love, but I felt a sort of tender curiosity.”

– F. Scott Fitzgerald 

“You need others. Too often people think that being unique means being isolated, and being a great artist means coming up with genius ideas out of nowhere. Nothing could be farther from the truth.”

– John Lasseter 

“And then I feel the sun itself
as it blazes over the hills,
like a million flowers on fire —
clearly I’m not needed,
yet I feel myself turning
into something of inexplicable value.”

– Mary Oliver 

“Why do people go to the cinema? What takes them into a darkened room where, for two hours, they watch the play of shadows on a sheet? The search for entertainment? The need for a kind of drug? All over the world there are, indeed, entertainment firms and organisations which exploit cinema and television and spectacles of many other kinds. Our starting-point, however, should not be there, but in the essential principles of cinema, which have to do with the human need to master and know the world. I think that what a person normally goes to the cinema for is time: for time lost or spent or not yet had. He goes there for living experience; for cinema, like no other art, widens, enhances and concentrates a person’s experience—and not only enhances it but makes it longer, significantly longer. That is the power of cinema: ‘stars’, story-lines and entertainment have nothing to do with it.”

– Andrei TarkovskySculpting In Time (1987)

January

“Just because I’m so horribly conditioned to accept everybody else’s values, and just because I like applause and people to rave about me, doesn’t make it right. I’m ashamed of it. I’m sick of it. I’m sick of not having the courage to be an absolute nobody. I’m sick of myself and everybody else that wants to make some kind of a splash.”

– J.D. Salinger 

~

“You cannot be anything if you want to be everything.”

– Solomon Schechter 

~


“The peculiar vanity of man, who wants to believe and who wants other people to believe that he is seeking after truth, when in fact it is love that he is asking the world to give him.” – Albert Camus - Notebooks 1935 - 1942

~

“And a softness came from the starlight and filled me full to the bone.”

– W. B. Yeats, The Wanderings of Oisin  

~

“I didn’t say I liked it. I said it fascinated me. There is a great difference.”

– Oscar Wilde, adapted from The Picture of Dorian Gray 

~

“I have grown to love secrecy. It seems to be the one thing that can make modern life mysterious or marvelous to us. The commonest thing is delightful if only one hides it.”

– Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Grey 

~

“I want to make beautiful things, even if nobody cares.”

– Saul Bass  

~

“It was good for a while, being empty. I didn’t hurt anymore. But as time went on, it was like I could hear myself from far away, begging for permission to come back.”

– Myra McEntire,Hourglass 

“Nobody’s had more shots at the moon and missed than me.”

– Lana Del Rey, “Tired of Singing the Blues” 


“Waluigi is the ultimate example of the individual shaped by the signifier. Waluigi is a man seen only in mirror images; lost in a hall of mirrors he is a reflection of a reflection of a reflection. You start with Mario – the wholesome all Italian plumbing superman, you reflect him to create Luigi – the same thing but slightly less. You invert Mario to create Wario – Mario turned septic and libertarian – then you reflect the inversion in the reflection: you create a being who can only exist in reference to others. Waluigi is the true nowhere man, without the other characters he reflects, inverts and parodies he has no reason to exist. Waluigi’s identity only comes from what and who he isn’t - without a wider frame of reference he is nothing. He is not his own man. In a world where our identities are shaped by our warped relationships to brands and commerce we are all Waluigi.”

– I, We, Waluigi: a Post-Modern analysis of Waluigi by Franck Ribery 

~

“Suffering is the noblest art, the quieter the better.”

– Chang-rae Lee 


~

“Does what goes on inside show on the outside? Someone has a great fire in his soul and nobody ever comes to warm themselves at it, and passers-by see nothing but a little smoke at the top of the chimney.”

– Vincent Van Gogh 

THERE IS A PERIOD WHEN IT IS CLEAR
THAT YOU HAVE GONE WRONG
BUT YOU CONTINUE.
SOMETIMES THERE IS A
LUXURIOUS AMOUNT OF TIME
BEFORE SOMETHING BAD HAPPENS.
~

“What do I care, in the dreams and the languor of spring,
That my songs do not show me at all?
For they are a fragrance, and I am a flint and a fire,
I am an answer, they are only a call.”

– Sara Teasdale 

“I don’t like the idea of ‘understanding’ a film. I don’t believe that rational understanding is an essential element in the reception of any work of art. Either a film has something to say to you or it hasn’t. If you are moved by it, you don’t need it explained to you. If not, no explanation can make you moved by it.”

– Federico Fellini 

“Your name is a golden bell hung in my heart. I would break my body to pieces to call you once by your name.”

– Peter S. Beagle, The Last Unicorn  

“To consult the rules of composition before making a picture is a little like consulting the law of gravitation before going for a walk.”

– Edward Weston 

“People who say it cannot be done should not interrupt those who are doing it.”

– George Bernard Shaw 

“I am a contrast between silence and noise; of blood and snow.”

“Do not look for my heart any more; the beasts have eaten it.”

Charles Baudelaire, Flowers of Evil, (1857)

“I am conscious about myself and everything, and then suddenly, or slowly, my conscious fades out. Switches off. And it’s not existing, and that’s a marvelous feeling. That from existing, I am not existing. And at that moment, nothing can happen to me.”

– Ingmar Bergman 

“Scare the world: Be exactly who you say you are and tell the truth.”

The Shock of Honesty 

“On the other hand, all suicides are familiar with the struggle against the temptation of suicide. Every one of them knows very well in some corner of his soul that suicide, though a way out, is rather a mean and shabby one, and that it is nobler and finer to be felled by life than by one’s own hand.”

– Hermann Hesse - Steppenwolf 

“Anxiety about personal attractiveness could never be thought defining of a man: a man, is first of all, seen. Women are looked at.”

– Susan Sontag, When The Stress Falls 

“In solitude the mind gains strength and learns to lean upon itself.”

– Laurence Sterne 

“The reason I hadn’t washed my clothes or my hair was because it seemed so silly.
I saw the days of the year stretching ahead like a series of bright, white boxes, and separating one box from another was sleep, like a black shade. Only for me, the long perspective of shades that set off one box from the next had suddenly snapped up, and I could see day after day glaring ahead of me like a white, broad, infinitely desolate avenue. 
It seemed silly to wash one day when I would only have to wash again the next. 
It made me tired just to think of it. 
I wanted to do everything once and for all and be through with it.”

– Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar

“See, we were never about butterflies. We’ve always been about burning stars. All about us is unearthly and radiant.”

– Anna Akhmatova, from  Anna Of All The Russias: A Life Of Anna Akhmatova 

“We can imagine the books we’d like to read, even if they have not yet been written, and we can imagine libraries full of books we would like to possess, even if they are well beyond our reach, because we enjoy dreaming up a library that reflects every one of our interests and every one of our foibles—a library that, in its variety and complexity, fully reflects the reader we are.”

– Alberto Manguel 

“And even though people try to pretend that pain doesn’t do anything to them, none of us can really handle it. Everything bad we do in our life is because of pain of some kind.”

– James Frey, The Final Testament of the Holy Bible 

“Artists use frauds to make human beings seem more wonderful than they really are. Dancers show us human beings who move much more gracefully than human beings really move. Films and books and plays show us people talking much more entertainingly than people really talk, make paltry human enterprises seem important. Singers and musicians show us human beings making sounds far more lovely than human beings really make. Architects give us temples in which something marvelous is obviously going on. Actually, practically nothing is going on.”

– Kurt Vonnegut 

“It’s easy to attack and destroy an act of creation. It’s a lot more difficult to perform one.”

– Chuck Palahniuk 

You have to be odd to be number one.

Dr. Seuss

“Estar como agua para chocolate es decir a punto de explotar de rabia o de pasión amorosa.”

– Laura Esquivel (1989)

“I freeze even the kindest hearts—that’s how I am.”

– Jean-Paul Sartre, from No Exit And Three Other Plays

“What I detest in you, is—myself.”

– Jean-Paul Sartre, from No Exit And Three Other Plays

“Her soul is like a sultry, windless noon, in which nothing stirs, nothing changes, nothing lives. Only a fierce unmoving sun beats down on bare rocks forever.”

– Jean-Paul Sartre, from No Exit And Three Other Plays

“Seize the moment of excited curiosity on any subject to solve your doubts; for if you let it pass, the desire may never return, and you may remain in ignorance.”

– William Wirt 

“Sometimes I worry that if I am not moved by a… thing, I may be completely despaired, or dead.”

– Maggie Nelson, fromBluets 

“I have no problem understanding that women are interested in mascara and the Middle East. Men are allowed to talk about sports relentlessly, and yet we still take them seriously. I don’t understand why women can’t talk about fashion, or sex, or love, or wanting more money and not be taken as seriously as men.”

Joanna Coles, editor of Cosmopolitan magazine,tells NPR’s Rachel Martin why she thinks women should be able to talk about fashion and politics.

“I know that I have never been any use to anyone — but also not very much to myself.”

– Frédéric Chopin, from a letter 

“Sad; so sad, those smoky-rose, smoky-mauve evenings of late autumn, sad enough to pierce the heart. The sun departs the sky in winding sheets of gaudy cloud; anguish enters the city, a sense of the bitterest regret, a nostalgia for things we never knew, anguish for the turn of the year, the time of impotent yearning, the inconsolable season.”

– Angela Carter, Black Venus 

“Existing is plagiarism.”

– Emil Cioran. Drawn and Quartered. 1983. 

“Retouching is our favourite artistic device. Each of us is a curator in his own museum. Uncover A, cover up B. Remove all spots. Keep your mouth shut. Think of your tongue as a weapon. Think one thing and say another. Use orotund expressions to obfuscate your intentions. Hide what you believe. Believe what you hide.”

– Dubravka Ugrešić, fromThe Ministry of Pain

“Always end the name of your child with a vowel, so that when you yell the name will carry.”

– Bill Cosby 

“No artist tolerates reality.”

– Friedrich Nietzsche  

“As long as the social function is not criticized, then all film criticism is symptomatic criticism and itself has a symptomatic character. It exhausts itself on questions of taste and remains completely imprisoned in class prejudice. It never recognizes that taste is merchandise and the weapon of a particular class, but rather it sets taste as an absolute (which everyone has access to, which everyone can buy, even if, in fact, everyone cannot pay).”

– Bertolt Brecht, “On Cinema” 

“There are times when I am convinced I am unfit for any human relationship.”

– Franz Kafka, from Letters To Felice 

'She's always looking for poetry and passion and sensitivity, the whole Romantic kitchen. I live on a rather simpler diet.'

'Prose and pudding?'

'I don't expect attractive men necessarily to have attractive souls.'

– John Fowles 

“I just disappeared. I do that. I move into another world, a different world. Like boarding a train running parallel. That’s what disappearing is. Don’t you see?”

– Haruki Murakami — Dance Dance Dance 

“Emotionally, I wanted to stay. Intellectually, I wanted to leave. As always, I seemed to enjoy punishing myself.”

– Susan Sontag,from Reborn: Journals & Notebooks 

“This is the real secret of life — to be completely engaged with what you are doing in the here and now. And instead of calling it work, realize it is play.”

– Alan Watts 

“No wonder they cannot appreciate the really central Kafka joke: that the horrific struggle to establish a human self results in a self whose humanity is inseparable from that horrific struggle. That our endless and impossible journey toward home is in fact our home.”

– David Foster Wallace,Consider the Lobster, ”Certainly the End of Something or Other, One Would Sort of Have to Think” 

“People throw away what they could have by insisting on perfection, which they cannot have, and looking for it where they will never find it.”

– Edith Schaeffer 

“I have advice for people who want to write. I don’t care whether they’re 5 or 500. There are three things that are important: First, if you want to write, you need to keep an honest, unpublishable journal that nobody reads, nobody but you. Where you just put down what you think about life, what you think about things, what you think is fair and what you think is unfair. And second, you need to read. You can’t be a writer if you’re not a reader. It’s the great writers who teach us how to write. The third thing is to write. Just write a little bit every day. Even if it’s for only half an hour — write, write, write.”

– Madeleine L’Engle 

“Everything she does comes from within, from some dark impulse.”

– Black Swan (2010) dir. by Darren Aronofsky 

“I feel such a creative force in me: I am convinced that there will be a time when, let us say, I will make something good every day, on a regular basis… I am doing my very best to make every effort because I am longing so much to make beautiful things. But beautiful things mean painstaking work, disappointment, and perseverance.”

– Vincent Van Gogh 

“Say alone. Forty times.Pair it with
the desert. Say it. Alone. Alone. Alone.
Say the words plain, she says. Say it plain.
Say it outright. Alone.Don’t get poetic.
Say I. Say me. Say I am alone. Own it. I am alone.

– Jeanann Verlee, from “The Session 

“There is no such thing as a neutral educational process. Education either functions as an instrument that is used to facilitate the integration of the younger generation into the logic of the present system and bring about conformity to it, or it becomes “the practice of freedom,” the means by which men and women deal critically and creatively with reality and discover how to participate in the transformation of their world. The development in an educational methodology that facilitates this process will inevitably lead to tension and conflict within our society.”

– Paulo Freire (Pedagogy of the Oppressed)

“If only I may grow: firmer, simpler, — quieter, warmer.”

– Dag Hammarskjold, Secretary General of the United Nations, Nobel laureate (1905-1961)

“You have to know who you are, if you don’t you have nightmares.”

– Stephen Rea 

“Don’t let everyone get the privilege of getting to know you.”

10 BETTER BODY AFFIRMATIONS FOR YOUNG WOMEN


1. Your body is in flux for the rest of your life. Think of your body as fluid instead of static — it’s always going to change. So get comfortable with those changes.

2. No one will love you or not love you because of your body. You are lovable because you’re you, not because your body looks a certain way.

3. The most intensely personal relationship you’ll ever have is with your body. It’s a lifelong relationship that’s well worth investing in and nurturing the same way you would with loved ones.

4. You don’t owe your body to anyone. Not sexually, not aesthetically. Your body is yours. Period.

5. What someone else says about your body says more about them than it does about you. Look past the actual snark to the person who’s saying it, because it’s only a reflection of what they think of themselves. That’s when you’ll see how little power their words have.

6. Your body is not a reflection of your character. It’s a physical home for the complex and wondrous and unique being that is you.

7. Take up as much space as you want. You don’t have to be small, or quiet, or docile, regardless of your physical size.

8. Everything you need to accept your body is already inside you. There’s no book, or diet, or workout routine or external affirmation that you need to feel good about your body right now.

9. Your body is a priority. It’s always trying to tell you things. Taking the time to listen to is of the utmost importance.

10. Wear whatever you want. Your body shape does not dictate your personal style, and fashion rules that say otherwise are wrong. Dress yourself in a way that makes you feel happy and confident and beautiful, because guess what? You are.

– Ami Angelowicz and Winona Dimeo-Ediger 

“Most of the basic material a writer works with is acquired before the age of fifteen.”

– Willa Cather 

“I have no other possessions of value but my soul.”


“She looked just like a painting dying to speak.”

– Aeschylus, Agamemnon  

“Truly powerful women don’t explain why they want respect. They simply don’t engage those who don’t give it to them.”

– Sherry Argov 

“A serious girl, when she finds someone who calms her spirit and quiets her busy thoughts, will love you so fiercely, it will defy even her own logic and reasoning.”

Unknown 

“The intensification of a person’s self-awareness: in astrology, that is all that matters.”

– Steven Forrest, The Inner Sky 

“The power of a glance has been so much abused in love stories, that it has come to be disbelieved in. Few people dare now to say that two beings have fallen in love because they have looked at each other. Yet it is in this way that love begins, and in this way only.”

– Victor Hugo 

“My world falls apart, crumbles, “The centre cannot hold.” There is no integrating force, only the naked fear, the urge of self-preservation. I am afraid. I am not solid, but hollow. I feel behind my eyes a numb, paralysed cavern, a pit of hell, a mimicking nothingness. I never thought. I never wrote, I never suffered. I want to kill myself, to escape from responsibility, to crawl back abjectly into the womb. I do not know who I am, where I am going—and I am the one who has to decide the answers to these hideous questions. I long for a noble escape from freedom—I am weak, tired, in revolt from the strong constructive humanitarian faith which presupposes a healthy, active intellect and will. There is nowhere to go.”

– Sylvia Plath, The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath 

“He wanted all to lie in an ecstasy of peace; I wanted all to sparkle and dance in a glorious jubilee. I said his heaven would be only half alive; and he said mine would be drunk: I said I should fall asleep in his; and he said he could not breathe in mine.”

– Wuthering Heights, Emily Bronte 

“You’ve got too much soul to be handled by someone who has never been passionate.”


“My grandfather always said that living is like licking honey off a thorn.”

– Louis Adamic 

“I am no fun at all. In fact, I am anti-fun. Not as in anti-violence, but as in anti-matter. I am not so much against fun - although I suppose I kind of am - as I am the opposite of fun. I suck the fun out of a room. Or perhaps I’m just a different kind of fun; the kind that leaves one bereft of hope; the kind of fun that ends in tears.”

– David Rakoff, Don’t Get Too Comfortable 

“The nearness of him crushed her, like being held by the sun.”

– Catherynne M. Valente, from Deathless

“The whole of life is just like watching a film. Only it’s as though you always get in ten minutes after the big picture has started, and no-one will tell you the plot, so you have to work it out all yourself from the clues.”

– Terry Pratchett 

“Growing up is losing some illusions, in order to acquire others.”

– Virginia Woolf 

“I have dreamed much and have done very little. What deceives the superficial observer is the lack of harmony between my sentiments and my ideas.”

– Gustave Flaubert, The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert Letters. 

“Don’t say maybe if you want to say no.”

– Paulo Coelho 

“… more and more information …
… less and less meaning.”

– Jean Baudrillard,Simulacra and Simulation

“Begin doing what you want to do now. We are not living in eternity. We have only this moment, sparkling like a star in our hand — and melting like a snowflake.”

– Sir Francis Bacon 

“Stay away from people who make you feel like you are hard to love.”


“Four billion people on this earth
but my imagination is still the same.
It’s bad with large numbers.
It’s still taken by particularity.
It flits in the dark like a flashlight,
illuminating only random faces
while all the rest go by,
never coming to mind and never really missed.”

– Wisława Szymborska 

“How can we remain true to ourselves without becoming infinitely arrogant and extravagant? People want us to fit in without complaint, and we are completely ridiculous in the solitude we want to preserve—and we cannot justify that. It is not that we fear what we are experiencing, but rather the dreadful result: that after the lived experience we will become numb and assume the same cowardly gesture unto eternity. I hope you won’t be annoyed if these words, which could be uttered only from my point of view, failed to touch on anything of importance to you, if I made the mistake of keeping my remarks too general. But you will surely agree with me that everything depends on our not allowing any of our warmth for people to be taken from us. Even if, for a while, we must preserve this warmth in a less expressive and more abstract way, it willendure and surely find its form.”

– Walter Benjamin, from aletter to Carla Seligson 

“The ego says, ‘I shouldn’t have to suffer,’ and that thought makes you suffer so much more. It is a distortion of the truth, which is always paradoxical. The truth is that you need to say yes to suffering before you can transcend it.”

–  Eckhart Tolle 

“It is a good rule in life never to apologize. The right sort of people do not want apologies, and the wrong sort take a mean advantage of them.”

– P.G. Wodehouse 

“We are always falling in love or quarreling, looking for jobs or fearing to lose them, getting ill and recovering, following public affairs. If we let ourselves, we shall always be waiting for some distraction or other to end before we can really get down to our work. The only people who achieve much are those who want knowledge so badly that they seek it while the conditions are still unfavorable. Favorable conditions never come.”

– C.S. Lewis, The Weight of The Glory  

“In a male-supremacist society, female power must logically appear illogical, mysterious, intimate, threatening. “Witch” stands for all those unnamable shadow acts of disappearance and withdrawal, self-cultivation, and self-medication that elude the social and sexual order”

– Editors’ Note: Witches   

“Stop worrying about your identity and concern yourself with the people you care about, ideas that matter to you, beliefs you can stand by, tickets you can run on. Intelligent humans make those choices with their brain and hearts and they make them alone. The world does not deliver meaning to you. You have to make it meaningful…and decide what you want and need and must do. It’s a tough, unimaginably lonely and complicated way to be in the world. But that’s the deal: you have to live; you can’t live by slogans, dead ideas, clichés, or national flags. Finding an identity is easy. It’s the easy way out.”

– Zadie Smith, On Beauty  

“We don’t just need to be rescued from loving the wrong things. We need to be rescued from loving the right things in the wrong way.”

– B.B. // Finding Our Way Home 

“You have to create something from nothing.”

– Ralph Lauren 

“Do you still perform autopsies on conversations you had lives ago?”

– Donte Collins 

“I’m still learning to love the parts of me that no one claps for.”

– Rudy Francisco  

“People with yuan fen are destined to like one another;
Friendship develops even if a thousand miles apart.
But should yuan fen be absent between two individuals,
They will remain strangers despite sitting face-to-face.”

– Adeline Yen Mah 

“A writer is someone who spends years patiently trying to discover the second being inside him, and the world that makes him who he is: when I speak of writing, what comes first to my mind is not a novel, a poem, or literary tradition, it is a person who shuts himself up in a room, sits down at a table, and alone, turns inward; amid its shadows, he builds a new world with words.”

– Orhan Pamuk 

He says ‘I don’t get it, why are you still a virgin at 24?’

He says ‘I don’t believe you, I’ve seen you walk, virgins don’t walk like that’

He says, ‘That ain’t natural, people are supposed to fuck.’

He asks ‘Why though? No offence though.’

I ask ‘When was your first time?’

He says ‘I was 12’

He says ‘I know what you’re thinking, that’s too young.’

I look at his knuckles, he has two good hands.

He says ‘She was older than me.’

I ask ‘How old?’

And he says ‘It’s better that the girl is older, that’s how I learnt all things I know’

He licks his lips.

I ask again ‘How old?’

He says ‘I could use one finger to make you sob’

I think of my brother in prison and I can’t remember his face.

I ask again ‘How old?’

He says ‘Boys become men in the laps of women, you know?’

I think of my mother’s face lined with her bad choices in men.

He says ‘If you were mine you wouldn’t get away with this shit, I’d eat you for hours, I’d gut you like fruit.’

I think of my cousin’s circumcision, how he feels like a mermaid, not human from the waist down.

He says ‘I’d look after you, you know?’

I laugh, I ask for the last time ‘How old?’

He says ‘34.’

He says ‘She was beautiful though and I know what you’re thinking but it’s not like that, I’m a man, I’m a man, I’m a man. No one could ever hurt me’.

– Warsan Shire, Crude Conversations With Boys Who Fake Laughter Often

“Everyone returns us to a different sense of ourselves, for we become a little of who they think we are.”

– Alain de Botton - On Love. 

“My happiest hours are those in which I think nothing, want nothing, when I do not even dream, but lose myself in some spurious vegetable torpor, moss growing on the surface of life. Without a trace of bitterness I savour my absurd awareness of being nothing, a mere foretaste of death and extinction.”

– Fernando Pessoa 

“Perfume is decidedly not about two things: it isn’t about memory and it isn’t about sex. Perfume is about beauty and intellect. A perfume is a message in a bottle—not a smell—and the message is written by the perfumer and read by the person who smells it.”

– Biophysicist, writer, and fragrance industry legend Luca Turin  

“I am a writer of fiction and so I am a liar too and invent from what I know and that I’ve heard. I’m a liar. My excuse is that I make the truth as I invent it truer than it would be. That is what makes good writers or bad.”

– Ernest Hemingway, from True At First Light

“If the dead are watching, I want them to see us writing, dancing, singing, painting. I want them to see that we still reach out to each other.”

– Richard Siken, ‘Black Telephone’

“Hipster economics are standard economics because hipsters are everything the US economy has ever wished for in one convenient package. It’s a group consisting largely of young, upper-middle class people with very little conviction, who will spend large amounts of money to maintain their own comfort and the appearance of diversity and rebellion. They are activists as long as it’s easy, poor as long as it doesn’t involve dirt or hunger, and selfless as long as they don’t stand to lose anything. They represent the sanitizing of national issues so that they can be discussed without being addressed. And all you have to do to control them is use some reverse psychology. They’re not rebels, they’re not even malicious, because they’re not anything except a bunch of kids playing pretend. They’ll eventually grow up and become bankers, lawyers and politicians, just like their parents…”

– Top comment by “Robert” on The Peril of Hipster Economics 

“It’s not hard to decide what you want your life to be about. What’s hard, she said, is figuring out what you’re willing to give up in order to do the things you really care about.”

– Bittersweet, Shauna Niequist 

“Romance is tempestuous. Love is calm.”

– Mason Cooley 

“Never cut what you can untie.”

– Joseph Joubert 

“When I’m in writing mode for a novel, I get up at four AM and work for five to six hours. In the afternoon, I run for 10 km or swim for 1500m (or do both), then I read a bit and listen to some music. I keep to this routine every day without variation. The repetition itself becomes the important thing, I mesmerize myself to reach a deeper state of mind. … Writing is like a survival training. Physical strength is as necessary as artistic sensitivity.”

– Haruki Murakami 

“Stop apologizing to men for not wanting to sit them with, drink with them, dance with them, go home with them. You have not been put on this earth for their pleasure, their entertainment, to help them feel a little less lonely at night. If you do not want someone, are not interested in someone, don’t apologize. You do not have to be forgiven for the sake of someone else’s feelings. All you have to worry about is your own.

If you’re dating someone and they cheat on you with the girl sitting across them from the bar, or anyone for that matter, do not ask their name, why they did it, and if it was worth it. Just leave. Do not swear your revenge, or that you find the one who broke your relationship because the person who broke your trust is sitting right in front of you. The person who ruined what you had is the one who promised that they never would. Do not fixate yourself on what you should have or could have done, but what you will do, which is leave. You gave them a chance and now they can see it walk out the door.

You’re going to make mistakes and that’s inevitable, but what isn’t is making those same mistakes twice. You are supposed to learn from the pain, supposed to take it into your hands, hang it on your wall to remind yourself that you will never let it happen again. It’s hard stopping others from repeating their tragedies, but when it comes to your own, you are in control.

Love as many as you want. Kiss as many as you want. Fuck as many as you want. But when you do these things do it with all of you. Do it because you know it will show you something, help you with something, make sense of things. Never do a task that was assigned by someone else if you are not interested, not comfortable, unwilling. You can do anything you want to do as long as you know that there is only understanding and truth behind it. Never settle, never give in and never do anything that you don’t want to just because you feel bad.

Learn to say no. Learn to fight. Learn the difference between love and lust and learn to love yourself. If you love yourself, when you’re alone, you won’t need the presence of another just to make you feel at ease. You’ll have the power of healing in your very own body. You’re beautiful, remember that, write it down, scream it out loud and never forget. You have the entire world inside of your hands and the only thing you truly need to know to push through these trying times is that you can do anything. Now do it.”

– "Tips for girls who are still growing up," - Colleen Brown

“Sometimes, in order to move on, you got to find a new addiction to get over another.”

– jenn satsune 

“Chic, is first, when you don’t have to prove you have money, either because you have a lot and it doesn’t matter or because you don’t have any and it doesn’t matter. Chic is not aspirational. Chic is the most impossible thing to define. Luxury is a humorless thing, largely, and when humor happens in luxury it happens involuntarily. Chic is all about humor. Which means chic is about intelligence. And there has to be oddness— most luxury is conformist, and chic cannot be. Chic must be polite and not incommode others, but within that it can be as weird as it wants.”

– Luca Turin 

“It is true when you are by yourself and you think about life, it is always sad. All that excitement and so on has a way of suddenly leaving you, and it’s as though, in the silence, somebody called your name, and you heard your name for the first time.”

– Katherine Mansfield, from Bliss, And Other Short Stories

“[L]et us not overlook the further great fact, that not only does science underlie sculpture, painting, music, poetry, but that science is itself poetic. The current opinion that science and poetry are opposed is a delusion. … On the contrary science opens up realms of poetry where to the unscientific all is a blank. Those engaged in scientific researches constantly show us that they realize not less vividly, but more vividly, than others, the poetry of their subjects. Whoever will dip into Hugh Miller’s works on geology, or read Mr. Lewes’s “Seaside Studies,” will perceive that science excites poetry rather than extinguishes it. And whoever will contemplate the life of Goethe will see that the poet and the man of science can co-exist in equal activity. Is it not, indeed, an absurd and almost a sacrilegious belief that the more a man studies Nature the less he reveres it? Think you that a drop of water, which to the vulgar eye is but a drop of water, loses anything in the eye of the physicist who knows that its elements are held together by a force which, if suddenly liberated, would produce a flash of lightning? Think you that what is carelessly looked upon by the uninitiated as a mere snow-flake, does not suggest higher associations to one who has seen through a microscope the wondrously varied and elegant forms of snow-crystals? Think you that the rounded rock marked with parallel scratches calls up as much poetry in an ignorant mind as in the mind of a geologist, who knows that over this rock a glacier slid a million years ago? The truth is, that those who have never entered upon scientific pursuits know not a tithe of the poetry by which they are surrounded. Whoever has not in youth collected plants and insects, knows not half the halo of interest which lanes and hedge-rows can assume. Whoever has not sought for fossils, has little idea of the poetical associations that surround the places where imbedded treasures were found. Whoever at the seaside has not had a microscope and aquarium, has yet to learn what the highest pleasures of the seaside are. Sad, indeed, is it to see how men occupy themselves with trivialities, and are indifferent to the grandest phenomena—care not to understand the architecture of the universe, but are deeply interested in some contemptible controversy about the intrigues of Mary Queen of Scots!—are learnedly critical over a Greek ode, and pass by without a glance that grand epic… upon the strata of the Earth!”

– Herbert Spencer 

“Art exists because life is not enough.”

– Ferreira Gullar  

“Do you think the universe fights for souls to be together? 
Some things are too strange and strong to be coincidences.”

– Emery Allen    

“Remind yourself that you don’t have to do what everyone else is doing.”

“No writing is wasted. Did you know that sourdough from San Francisco is leavened partly by a bacteria called lactobacillus sanfrancisensis? It is native to the soil there, and does not do well elsewhere. But any kitchen can become an ecosystem. If you bake a lot, your kitchen will become a happy home to wild yeasts, and all your bread will taste better. Even a failed loaf is not wasted. Likewise, cheese makers wash the dairy floor with whey. Tomato gardeners compost with rotten tomatoes. No writing is wasted: the words you can’t put in your book can wash the floor, live in the soil, lurk around in the air. They will make the next words better.”

– Erin Bow 

“If two people were exactly alike, one of them would be unnecessary.”

– Larry Dixon 

“I want to keep my soul fertile for the changes, so things keep being born in me, so things keep dying when it is time for things to die. I want to keep walking away from the person I was a moment ago, because a mind was made to figure things out, not to read the same page recurrently.”

– Donald Miller | Through Painted Deserts (viapureblyss)

“…my dreams slice me to pieces.”

– Anne Sexton, from Lost Lies 

“I want to make something completely new. I want to work so hard that everything of me burns away, like the chemical in the match. Which leaves what really is me, or what I think is me. I just want to achieve my own vibe. And it’s nothing arty, nothing lofty, it’s just fucking different, and I want to leave this world behind a little so that maybe I’ll see that it’s bigger and I haven’t left it at all.”

– Jeff Buckley 

“I don’t understand why we must do things in this world, why we must have friends and aspirations, hopes and dreams. Wouldn’t it be better to retreat to a faraway corner of the world, where all its noise and complications would be heard no more? Then we could renounce culture and ambitions; we would lose everything and gain nothing; for what is there to be gained from this world?”

– Emil Cioran, On the Heights of Despair 

“I’m someone who’s mostly dead inside but still has a little hope for something extraordinary, which, as I said, is the worst breed of human, because it means I know everything is bullshit, but that I secretly hope for the day when it might not be.”

– Nick Miller