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  • #91
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “I think I’m heading into a time in my life where words and labels will lose their meaning. It will only be the intent behind them that will matter.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, One True Loves

  • #92
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “I am who I am because I loved you once,” he says.
    “I am who I am because I loved you once, too,” I say.
    And then we say good-bye.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, One True Loves

  • #93
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “You start to understand that grief is chronic. That it's more about remission and relapse than it is about a cure. What that means to you is that you can't simply wait for it to be over. You have to move through it, like swimming in an undertow.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, One True Loves
    tags: grief

  • #94
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “I was flirting. Me. Flirting.

    It feels so good to flirt. No one ever talks about that. But in that moment, I felt like flirting was the very thing that made the world go around.

    The excitement of wondering what the other person will say next. The thrill of knowing someone is looking at you, liking what they see. The rush of looking at someone and liking what you see in them. Flirting is probably just as much about falling in love with yourself as it is with someone else.

    It’s about seeing yourself through someone’s eyes and realizing there is plenty to like about yourself, plenty of reasons someone might hang on your every word.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, One True Loves

  • #95
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Don’t ever let anyone tell you the most romantic part of love is the beginning. The most romantic part is when you know it has to end.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, One True Loves

  • #96
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Do you ever get over loss? Or do you just find a box within yourself, big enough to hold it? Do you just stuff it in there, push it down, and snap the lid on it? Do you just work, every day, to keep the box shut?”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, One True Loves

  • #97
    Sally Rooney
    “Marianne had the sense that her real life was happening somewhere very far away, happening without her, and she didn't know if she would ever find out where it was or become part of it.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #98
    Sally Rooney
    “It was culture as class performance, literature fetishised for its ability to take educated people on false emotional journeys, so that they might afterwards feel superior to the uneducated people whose emotional journeys they liked to read about.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #99
    Sally Rooney
    “No one can be independent of other people completely, so why not give up the attempt, she thought, go running in the other direction, depend on people for everything, allow them to depend on you, why not.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #100
    Sally Rooney
    “Life offers up these moments of joy despite everything,”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #101
    Sally Rooney
    “Generally I find men are a lot more concerned with limiting the freedoms of women than exercising personal freedom for themselves.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #102
    Sally Rooney
    “Her eyes fill up with tears again and she closes them. Even in memory she will find this moment unbearably intense, and she's aware of this now, while it's happening. She has never believed herself fit to be loved by any person. But now she has a new life, of which this is the first moment, and even after many years have passed she will still think: Yes, that was it, the beginning of my life.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #103
    Sally Rooney
    “Not for the first time Marianne thinks cruelty does not only hurt the victim, but the perpetrator also, and maybe more deeply and more permanently.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #104
    Sally Rooney
    “If people appeared to behave pointlessly in grief, it was only because human life was pointless, and this was the truth that grief revealed.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #105
    Sally Rooney
    “All these years, they’ve been like two little plants sharing the same plot of soil, growing around one another, contorting to make room, taking certain unlikely positions.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #106
    Sally Rooney
    “It feels powerful to him to put an experience down in words, like he's trapping it in a jar and it can never fully leave him.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #107
    Sally Rooney
    “Not for the first time Marianne thinks cruelty does not only hurt the victim, but the perpetrator also, and maybe more deeply and more permanently. You learn nothing very profound about yourself simply by being bullied; but by bullying someone else you learn something you can never forget.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #108
    Sally Rooney
    “He has sincerely wanted to die, but he has never sincerely wanted Marianne to forget about him. That’s the only part of himself he wants to protect, the part that exists inside her. ”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #109
    Sally Rooney
    “Suddenly he can spend an afternoon in Vienna looking at Vermeer’s The Art of Painting, and it’s hot outside, and if he wants he can buy himself a cheap cold glass of beer afterwards. It’s like something he assumed was just a painted backdrop all his life has revealed itself to be real: foreign cities are real, and famous artworks, and underground railway systems, and remnants of the Berlin Wall. That’s money, the substance that makes the world real. There’s something so corrupt and sexy about it.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #110
    Sally Rooney
    “If he silently decides not to say something when they’re talking, Marianne will ask ‘what?’ within one or two seconds. This ‘what?’ question seems to him to contain so much: not just the forensic attentiveness to his silences that allows her to ask in the first place, but a desire for total communication, a sense that anything unsaid is an unwelcome interruption between them.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #111
    Sally Rooney
    “He was like a freezer item that had thawed too quickly on the outside and was melting everywhere, while the inside was still frozen solid. Somehow he was expressing more emotion than at any time in his life before, while simultaneously feeling less, feeling nothing.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #112
    Sally Rooney
    “At times a person will make eye contact with Marianne, a bus conductor or someone looking for change, and she’ll be shocked briefly into the realisation that this is in fact her life, that she is actually visible to other people. This feeling opens her to certain longings: hunger and thirst, a desire to speak Swedish, a physical desire to swim or dance.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #113
    Sally Rooney
    “Lately he’s consumed by a sense that he is in fact two separate people, and soon he will have to choose which person to be on a full-time basis, and leave the other person behind.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #114
    Sally Rooney
    “She has never believed herself fit to be loved by any person. But now she has a new life, of which this is the first moment, and even after many years have passed she will still think: Yes, that was it, the beginning of my life.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #115
    Sally Rooney
    “If she was different with Connell, the difference was not happening inside herself, in her personhood, but in between them, in the dynamic.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #116
    Sally Rooney
    “She tries to be a good person. But deep down she knows she is a bad person, corrupted, wrong, and all her efforts to be right, to have the right opinions, to say the right things, these efforts only disguise what is buried inside her, the evil part of herself.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #117
    Sally Rooney
    “Marianne had a wildness that got into him for a while and made him feel that he was like her, that they had the same unnameable spiritual injury, and that neither of them could ever fit into the world. But he was never damaged like she was. She just made him feel that way.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #118
    Sally Rooney
    “That was it, people moved away, he moved away. Their life in Carricklea, which they had imbued with such drama and significance, just ended like that with no conclusion, and it would never be picked back up again, never in the same way.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #119
    Sally Rooney
    “If anything, his personality seemed like something external to himself, managed by the opinions of others, rather than anything he individually did or produced. Now he has a sense of invisibility, nothingness, with no reputation to recommend him to anyone.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People

  • #120
    Sally Rooney
    “Marianne had the sense that her real life was happening somewhere very far away, happening without her, and she didn’t know if she would ever find out where it was and become part of it. She had that feeling in school often, but it wasn’t accompanied by any specific images of what the real life might look or feel like. All she knew was that when it started, she wouldn’t need to imagine it anymore.”
    Sally Rooney, Normal People



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