Sofia Pons > Sofia's Quotes

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  • #1
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón
    “Le podría decir a usted que es el corazón, pero lo que lo mata es la soledad. Los recuerdos son peores que las balas.”
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón, The Shadow of the Wind

  • #2
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón
    “La muerte tiene estas cosas: a todo el mundo lo despierta la sensiblería. Frente a un ataúd, todos vemos sólo lo bueno o lo que queremos ver.”
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón, The Shadow of the Wind

  • #3
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón
    “Alguien dijo una vez que en el momento en que te paras a pensar si quieres a alguien, ya has dejado de quererle para siempre”
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón, La sombra del viento

  • #4
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón
    “No podía oír su voz o sentir su tacto, pero su luz y su calor ardían en cada rincón de aquella casa y yo, con la fe de los que todavía pueden contar sus años con los dedos de las manos, creía que si cerraba los ojos y le hablaba, ella podría oírme desde donde estuviese. A veces, mi padre me escuchaba desde el comedor y lloraba a escondida.
    Recuerdo que aquel alba de junio me desperté gritando. El corazón me batía en el pecho como si el alma quisiera abrirse camino y echar a correr escaleras abajo. Mi padre acudió azorado a mi habitación y me sostuvo en sus brazos, intentando calmarme.
    –No puedo acordarme de su cara. No puedo acordarme de la cara de mamá– murmuré sin aliento.
    Mi padre me abrazó con fuerza.
    –No te preocupes, Daniel. Yo me acordaré por los dos.”
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón, The Shadow of the Wind
    tags: grief

  • #5
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón
    “No hay casualidades, Daniel. Somos títeres de nuestra inconsciencia.”
    Carlos Ruiz Zafón, The Shadow of the Wind

  • #6
    Colleen Hoover
    “Cycles exist because they are excruciating to break. It takes an astronomical amount of pain and courage to disrupt a familiar pattern. Sometimes it seems easier to just keep running in the same familiar circles, rather than facing the fear of jumping and possibly not landing on your feet.”
    Colleen Hoover, It Ends with Us

  • #7
    Colleen Hoover
    “It’s not a person’s actions that hurt the most. It’s the love. If there was no love attached to the action, the pain would be a little easier to bear.”
    Colleen Hoover, It Ends with Us

  • #8
    Colleen Hoover
    “I read somewhere once that 85 percent of women return to abusive situations. That was before I realized I was in one, and when I heard that statistic, I thought it was because the women were stupid. I thought it was because they were weak.

    [...]

    I’m a statistic now. The things I’ve thought about women like me are now what others would think of me if they knew my current situation.
    “How could she love him after what he did to her? How could she contemplate taking him back?”
    It’s sad that those are the first thoughts that run through our minds when someone is abused. Shouldn’t there be more distaste in our mouths for the abusers than for those who continue to love the abusers?
    I think of all the people who have been in this situation before me. Everyone who will be in this situation after me.”
    Colleen Hoover, It Ends with Us

  • #9
    Colleen Hoover
    “People spend so much time wondering why the women don’t leave. Where are all the people who wonder why the men are even abusive? Isn’t that where the only blame should be placed?”
    Colleen Hoover, It Ends with Us

  • #10
    Colleen Hoover
    “You’re only human. And as humans, we can’t expect to shoulder all of our pain. Sometimes we have to share it with the people who love us so we don’t come crashing down from the weight of it all. But I can’t help you unless I know you need it. Ask me for help. We’ll get through this, I know we can.”
    Colleen Hoover, It Ends with Us

  • #11
    Colleen Hoover
    “Imagine all the people you meet in your life. There are so many. They come in like waves, trickling in and out with the tide. Some waves are much bigger and make more of an impact than others. Sometimes the waves bring with them things from deep in the bottom of the sea and they leave those things tossed onto the shore. Imprints against the grains of sand that prove the waves had once been there, long after the tide recedes.”
    Colleen Hoover, It Ends with Us

  • #12
    Colleen Hoover
    “Life is a funny thing. We only get so many years to live it, so we have to do everything we can to make sure those years are as full as they can be. We shouldn't waste time on things that might happen someday, or maybe even never.”
    Colleen Hoover, It Ends with Us

  • #13
    Colleen Hoover
    “When they ask you what happened, tell them you slipped on the ice.”
    When she said that, I just looked out my window and started crying. Because I thought for sure this was the final straw. That she would leave him now that he had hurt me. That was the moment I realized that she’d never leave him. I felt so defeated, but I was too scared to say anything to her about it.”
    Colleen Hoover, It Ends with Us

  • #14
    Colleen Hoover
    “I have friends at school, but they’re never allowed to come over to my house for obvious reasons. My mother is always worried something might happen with my father and word might get out about his temper. I also never really get to go to other people’s houses but I’m not sure why. Maybe my father doesn’t want me staying over at friends’ houses because I might witness how a good husband is supposed to treat his wife. He probably wants me to believe the way he treats my mother is normal.”
    Colleen Hoover, It Ends with Us

  • #15
    Dolly Alderton
    “it was like knocking on the wall of a prison cell and hearing someone tap back. It was like finding blades of grass on Mars. It was like turning the knob of the radio on and finally hearing the crackle smooth into a human voice. It was an escape out of my suburban doldrums and into an abundance of human life.”
    Dolly Alderton, Everything I Know About Love

  • #16
    Margaret Atwood
    “When you are in the middle of a story it isn’t a story at all, but only a confusion; a dark roaring, a blindness, a wreckage of shattered glass and splintered wood; like a house in a whirlwind, or else a boat crushed by the icebergs or swept over the rapids, and all aboard powerless to stop it. It’s only afterwards that it becomes anything like a story at all. When you are telling it, to yourself or to someone else.”
    Margaret Atwood, Alias Grace

  • #17
    Dolly Alderton
    “I carried on because it was the only thing I could control. I carried on because I just wanted to be happy and everyone knows when you’re thinner, you’re happier. I carried on because, at every turn, society was rewarding me for my self-inflicted torture. I received compliments, I received propositions, I felt more accepted by people I didn’t know, nearly all clothes looked great on me. I felt like I had finally earnt the right to be taken seriously as a woman; that everything before that had been redundant. That I had been foolish to think I had ever been worthy of affection. I had equated love with thinness and, to my horror, reinforcement of this belief was everywhere. My health was plummeting, my stocks were up.”
    Dolly Alderton, Everything I Know About Love

  • #18
    Dolly Alderton
    “To be a desirable woman – the sky’s the limit. Have every surface of your body waxed. Have manicures every week. Wear heels every day. Look like a Victoria’s Secret Angel even though you work in an office. It’s not enough to be an average-sized woman with a bit of hair and an all-right jumper. That doesn’t cut it. We’re told we have to look like the women who are paid to look like that as their profession.”
    Dolly Alderton, Everything I Know About Love

  • #19
    Dolly Alderton
    “It is a feeling I grew very used to – panicked and throaty; a sense that everyone in London was having a good time other than me; that there were pots of experiential gold hidden on every street corner and I wasn’t finding them; that one day I was going to be dead so why bring any potentially perfect and glorious day to a premature end with an early night.”
    Dolly Alderton, Everything I Know About Love

  • #20
    Dolly Alderton
    “It may seem that life is difficult at times but it’s really as simple as breathing in and out,’ she read. ‘Rip open hearts with your fury and tear down egos with your modesty. Be the person you wish you could be, not the person you feel you are doomed to be. Let yourself run away with your feelings. You were made so that someone could love you. Let them love you.”
    Dolly Alderton, Everything I Know About Love

  • #21
    Dolly Alderton
    “6. You are the sum total of everything that has happened to you up until that last slurp of that cup of tea you just put down. How your parents hugged you, that thing your first boyfriend once said about your thighs – these are all bricks that have been laid from the soles of your feet up. Your eccentricities, foibles and fuck-ups are a butterfly effect of things you saw on telly, things teachers said to you and the way people have looked at you since the first moment you opened your eyes. Being a detective for your past – tracing back through all of it to get to the source with the help of a professional – can be incredibly useful and freeing.”
    Dolly Alderton, Everything I Know About Love

  • #22
    Dolly Alderton
    “21. It’s completely OK to focus on yourself. You’re allowed to travel and live on your own and spend all your money on yourself and flirt with whoever you like and be as consumed with your work as you want. You don’t have to get married and you don’t have to have children. It doesn’t make you shallow if you don’t want to open up and share your life with a partner. But it’s also completely not OK to be in a relationship if you know that you want to be on your own.”
    Dolly Alderton, Everything I Know About Love

  • #23
    Dolly Alderton
    “25. If you’re feeling wildly overwhelmed with everything, try this: clean your room, answer all your unanswered emails, listen to a podcast, have a bath, go to bed before eleven.”
    Dolly Alderton, Everything I Know About Love

  • #24
    “To listen well is to figure out what’s on someone’s mind and demonstrate that you care enough to want to know. It’s what we all crave; to be understood as a person with thoughts, emotions, and intentions that are unique and valuable and deserving of attention.”
    Kate Murphy

  • #25
    “If you aren’t actively listening as Rogers described, you’ll miss the meaning beneath the message and be compromised, or clueless, in your future dealings with her.”
    Kate Murphy

  • #26
    “The world is easier to navigate if you remember that people are governed by emotions, acting more often out of jealousy, pride, shame, desire, fear, or vanity than dispassionate logic.”
    Kate Murphy

  • #27
    “The saddest things about these cases, beyond the crimes themselves, are the degrading things the victim begins to believe about her being. My hope is to undo these beliefs. I say her, but whether you are a man, transgender, gender-nonconforming, however you choose to identify and exist in this world, if your life has been touched by sexual violence, I seek to protect you. And to the ones who lifted me, day by day, out of darkness, I hope to say thank you.”
    Chanel Miller, Know My Name

  • #28
    “I didn’t know that money could make the cell doors swing open. I didn’t know that if a woman was drunk when the violence occurred, she wouldn’t be taken seriously. I didn’t know that if he was drunk when the violence occurred, people would offer him sympathy. I didn’t know that my loss of memory would become his opportunity. I didn’t know that being a victim was synonymous with not being believed.
    Sitting in the driveway, I didn’t know this little yes would reopen my body, would rub the cuts raw, would pry my legs open for the public. I had no idea what a preliminary hearing was or what a trial actually meant, no idea my sister and I would be instructed to stop speaking to each other because the defense would accuse us of conspiring. My three-letter word that morning unlocked a future, one in which I would become twenty-three and twenty-four and twenty-five and twenty-six before the case would be closed.”
    Chanel Miller, Know My Name

  • #29
    “Men had lines other men didn’t cross, an unspoken respected space. I imagined a thick line drawn like a perimeter around Lucas. Men would speak to me as if no line existed, every day I was forced to redraw it as quickly as I could. Why weren’t my boundaries inherent?”
    Chanel Miller, Know My Name: A Memoir

  • #30
    “When I listened to her, I understood: You have to hold out to see how your life unfolds, because it is most likely beyond what you can imagine. It is not a question of if you will survive this, but what beautiful things await you when you do. I had to believe her, because she was living proof. Then she said, Good and bad things come from the universe holding hands. Wait for the good to come.
    Chanel Miller, Know My Name



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