Ace > Ace's Quotes

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  • #1
    I'm selfish, impatient and a little insecure. I make mistakes, I am out of control
    “I'm selfish, impatient and a little insecure. I make mistakes, I am out of control and at times hard to handle. But if you can't handle me at my worst, then you sure as hell don't deserve me at my best.”
    Marilyn Monroe

  • #2
    John Burley
    “[...] the reason we do not trust one another is because we do not trust ourselves. We know all too well what we are capable of.”
    John Burley, The Forgetting Place
    tags: trust

  • #3
    Anne Frank
    “Quite honestly, I can't imagine how anyone can say: "I'm weak," and then remain so. After all, if you know it, why not fight against it, why not try to train your character? The answer was: "Because it's so much easier not to!" This reply rather discouraged me. Easy? Does that mean that a lazy, deceitful life is an easy life? Oh no, that can't be true, it mustn't be true, people can so easily be tempted by slackness... and by money.”
    Anne Frank, The Diary of a Young Girl

  • #4
    Jean de la Fontaine
    “Rare as is true love, true friendship is rarer.”
    Jean de La Fontaine

  • #5
    Primo Levi
    “For human nature is such that grief and pain—even simultaneously suffered—do not add up as a whole in our consciousness, but hide, the lesser behind the greater, according to a definite law of perspective. It is providential and is our means of surviving in the camp. And this is the reason why so often in free life one hears it said that man is never content. In fact it is not a question of a human incapacity for a state of absolute happiness, but of an ever-insufficient knowledge of the complex nature of the state of unhappiness; so that the single name of the major cause is given to all its causes, which are composite and set out in an order of urgency. And if the most immediate cause of stress comes to an end, you are grievously amazed to see that another one lies behind; and in reality a whole series of others.”
    Primo Levi, Survival in Auschwitz

  • #6
    Masashi Kishimoto
    “If you don't like the hand that fate's dealt you, fight for a new one.”
    Masashi Kishimoto

  • #7
    Henrik Ibsen
    “You arranged everything according to your own taste, and so I got the same tastes as you - or else I pretended to. I am really not quite sure which - I think sometimes the one and sometimes the other.”
    Henrik Ibsen, A Doll's House

  • #8
    Ali Smith
    “Google is so strange. It promises everything, but everything isn't there. You type in the words for what you need, and what you need becomes superfluous in an instant, shadowed instantaneously by the things you really need, and none of them answerable by Google....Sure, there's a certain charm to being able to look up and watch Eartha Kitt singing Old Fashioned Millionaire in 1957 at three in the morning or Hayley Mills singing a song about femininity from an old Disney film. But the charm is a kind of deception about a whole new way of feeling lonely, a semblance of plenitude but really a new level of Dante's inferno, a zombie-filled cemetery of spurious clues, beauty, pathos, pain, the faces of puppies, women and men from all over the world tied up and wanked over in site after site, a great sea of hidden shallows. More and more, the pressing human dilemma: how to walk a clean path between obscenities.”
    Ali Smith, There But For The

  • #9
    Johanna Lindsey
    “Do for yourself, for no one else will.”
    Johanna Lindsey, A Heart so Wild

  • #10
    Vikram Seth
    “How rarely these few years, as work keeps up aloof,
    Or fares, or one thing or another,
    How we had days to spend under our parents' roof;
    Myself, my sister, and my brother.

    All five of us will die; to reckon from the past
    This flesh and blood is unforgiving.
    What's hard is that just one of us will be the last
    To bear it all and go on living.”
    Vikram Seth

  • #11
    Oscar Wilde
    “Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.”
    Oscar Wilde

  • #12
    John Wesley
    “October 6, 1774
    I met those of our society who had votes in the ensuing election, and advised them
    1. To vote, without fee or reward, for the person they judged most worthy
    2. To speak no evil of the person they voted against, and
    3. To take care their spirits were not sharpened against those that voted on the other side.”
    John Wesley, The journal of John Wesley

  • #13
    Maya Angelou
    “I've learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.”
    Maya Angelou



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