Spellmist > Spellmist's Quotes

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  • #1
    Fredrik Backman
    “Because the terrible thing about becoming an adult is being forced to realize that absolutely nobody cares about us, we have to deal with everything ourselves now, find out how the whole world works. Work and pay bills, use dental floss and get to meetings on time, stand in line and fill out forms, come to grips with cables and put furniture together, change tires on the car and charge the phone and switch the coffee machine off and not forget to sign the kids up for swimming lessons. We open our eyes in the morning and life is just waiting to tip a fresh avalanche of "Don't Forget!"s and "Remember!"s over us. We don't have time to think or breathe, we just wake up and start digging through the heap, because there will be another one dumped on us tomorrow. We look around occasionally, at our place of work or at parents' meetings or out in the street, and realize with horror that everyone else seems to know exactly what they're doing. We're the only ones who have to pretend. Everyone else can afford stuff and has a handle on other stuff and enough energy to deal with even more stuff. And everyone else's children can swim.”
    Fredrik Backman, Anxious People

  • #2
    Susan Sontag
    “I don’t feel guilt at being unsociable, though I may sometimes regret it because my loneliness is painful. But when I move into the world, it feels like a moral fall – like seeking love in a whorehouse.”
    Susan Sontag, As Consciousness is Harnessed to Flesh: Journals and Notebooks, 1964-1980

  • #3
    Maggie O'Farrell
    “We are all, Esme decides, just vessels through which identities pass: we are lent features, gestures, habits, then we hand them on. Nothing is our own. We begin in the world as anagrams of our antecedents.”
    Maggie O'Farrell, The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox

  • #4
    Maggie O'Farrell
    “It is a terrible thing to want something you cannot have. It takes you over. I couldn't think straight because of it. There was no one else, I realized, whom I could possibly tell.”
    Maggie O'Farrell, The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox

  • #5
    Maggie O'Farrell
    “and when I first saw him I thought I might dissolve, like sugar in water.”
    Maggie O'Farrell, The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox

  • #6
    Maggie O'Farrell
    “In an odd way, we no longer seemed like a family, just a collection of people living in different rooms.”
    Maggie O'Farrell, The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox



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