Ky Fitzgerald > Ky's Quotes

Showing 1-13 of 13
sort by

  • #1
    “You must remember what you are and what you have chosen to become, and the significance of what you are doing. There are wars and defeats and victories of the human race that are not military and that are not recorded in the annals of history. Remember that while you’re trying to decide what to do.”
    John Williams, Stoner: A Novel

  • #2
    Joshua Ferris
    “Intelligent people are not always guided by their intelligence.Sometimes fear is a little more powerful.”
    Joshua Ferris

  • #3
    Joshua Ferris
    “Technology would never advance past primal fear. It would never trump human instinct.”
    Joshua Ferris

  • #4
    Satoshi Yagisawa
    “It's important to stand still sometimes. Think of it as a little rest in the long journey of life. This is your harbor. An your boat is just dropping anchor here for a little while. And after you're well rested, you can set sail again.”
    Satoshi Yagisawa

  • #5
    Satoshi Yagisawa
    “No matter where I went. no matter who I was with, if I could be honest with myself, then that was where I belonged.”
    Satoshi Yagisawa, Days at the Morisaki Bookshop

  • #6
    “My boat travels lightly, drifting aimlessly at the mercy of the current”
    Naoe Kinoshita

  • #7
    Susie Boyt
    “I felt arrows of rage rising in me, fraught images spreading like bloodstains. There’s no point, I told myself. I reached for the ordinary decoys. It won’t get you anywhere. Think of the outcome you want and make sure you are moving towards it. Got to be practical. That’s what I always told the girls at school. There is so much in life that doesn’t matter, so many things that hold you back, hem you in and throw you off the scent of what’s important. Don’t get too bogged down in things that don’t count or things you cannot influence, and specifically don’t worry too much about making sure others know you’re in the right, because it so easily gets in the way of what you want and need. Become an expert at shrugging most of life off and free yourself for what really interests you. Hone your focus. Don’t bother with cleaning or tidiness beyond basic hygiene. Don’t make your appearance your primary concern. It will zap all your creativity. Be as self-sufficient as you dare. Sometimes you hold more strength when people don’t know what you think or feel, so be very careful whom you confide in. People can run with your difficulties when you least expect it, distort them, relish them even, and before you know it they’re not yours any more. Respect your privacy. And earn you own money or you’ll lack power. Take good care of your friendships, nurture them and they’ll strengthen you. Don’t turn frowning at the defects of other people into a hobby, delicious though it may be; it poisons you. Read every day—it is a practice that dignifies humans. Become a great reader of books and it will help you with reality, you’ll more easily grasp the truth of things and that will set you up for life. And don’t expose your brain to low-quality art forms because there will be a certain measure of pollution.”
    Susie Boyt, Loved and Missed

  • #8
    Susie Boyt
    “Hero worship, when properly entered into, has a great deal of poetry in it. It inspires and motivates, renews and revives. It encourages introspection, investigation of desire, personal moral inventory and all manner of fruitful examinations. The cargo of goodwill that spells of extreme admiration create, can provide personal ballast against discouragement and grief. To be in the habit of fixing another with your highest personal regard over time increases your capacity to love. . . . Hero worship can be an emotional Olympics, a way of testing one’s lowest and highest drives. My Judy-love strengthens and inspires what is already good in me and what is bad. It helps me become more completely and entirely myself. And if the poetry of hero worship imparts some measure of heroism on the practitioner, then that is all to the good.”
    Susie Boyt, My Judy Garland Life: A Memoir

  • #9
    Satoshi Yagisawa
    “Back then, I couldn’t conceive of the idea that that time in my life would ever end. But those days have passed. That period of my life has receded into the distance. There’s no going back to the past.”
    Satoshi Yagisawa

  • #10
    Satoshi Yagisawa
    “I want all of you to accept me. I want to share the joy and sadness with all of you.”
    Satoshi Yagisawa

  • #11
    Satoshi Yagisawa
    “People forget all kinds of things. They live by forgetting. Yet our thoughts endure, the way waves leave traces in the sand.”
    Satoshi Yagisawa, More Days at the Morisaki Bookshop

  • #12
    Charles Bukowski
    “I never met another man I'd rather be. And even if that's a delusion, it's a lucky one.”
    Charles Bukowski

  • #13
    “He was forty-two years old, and he could see nothing before him that he wished to enjoy and little behind him that he cared to remember.”
    John Williams, Stoner



Rss
All Quotes



Tags From Ky’s Quotes