Joy ✨ > Joy ✨'s Quotes

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  • #1
    Cebo Campbell
    “People come through that door to heal. That’s all. To heal.”
    “Is that why you think I’m here?”
    “Why else would you? They’re gone. Now you got no excuses for who you can be. So who you gonna be? Same as you were? Or everything you would’ve been otherwise?”
    Cebo Campbell

  • #2
    Kristin Hannah
    “That means you’ve got what it takes, Frank. We all went through it. Nurses back in the world are second-class citizens. And, big surprise—they’re mostly women. Men keep us in boxes, make us wear starched virgin white, and tell us that docs are gods. And the worst part is, we believe them.”
    Kristin Hannah, The Women

  • #3
    Kristin Hannah
    “Thank God for girlfriends. In this crazy, chaotic, divided world that was run by men, you could count on the women.”
    Kristin Hannah, The Women

  • #4
    Cebo Campbell
    “Stand. Stand to your feet. We rise. That’s what we do. No matter the pressure or circumstance, don’t matter how high the tide of our troubles get, we rise above it. That’s resilience. You may not believe that you are like me in any other way but that. Because you’re still here. And I’m still here with you. So stand up.”
    Cebo Campbell, Sky Full of Elephants

  • #5
    Cebo Campbell
    “Passionate people, creative and feeling people. People forced to be alone and in the dark, but who taught themselves to shine so bright they could always find each other. Sidney illuminated along with them. Us.”
    Cebo Campbell, Sky Full of Elephants

  • #6
    Percival Everett
    “At that moment the power of reading made itself clear and real to me. If I could see the words, then no one could control them or what I got from them. They couldn’t even know if I was merely seeing them or reading them, sounding them out or comprehending them. It was a completely private affair and completely free and, therefore, completely subversive.”
    Percival Everett, James

  • #7
    Victoria Christopher Murray
    “Race determined when we could speak, what we could say, where we could live, how we were educated—race was the burden every Negro bore, and that verity left us with a double consciousness that we had to chart through every minute of each day.”
    Victoria Christopher Murray, Cantos Para os Meus Netos: Poemas de Victor Hugo

  • #8
    Victoria Christopher Murray
    “This is the gift of Harlem—the dress, the music, the language. It isn’t possible to live here and not begin to breathe and bleed this place.”
    Victoria Christopher Murray, Harlem Rhapsody



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