Shiv > Shiv's Quotes

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  • #1
    Golda Meir
    “Don't be so humble - you are not that great.”
    Golda Meir

  • #2
    Jonathan Safran Foer
    “You cannot protect yourself from sadness without protecting yourself from happiness.”
    Jonathan Safran Foer

  • #3
    Pythagoras
    “As long as Man continues to be the ruthless destroyer of lower living beings, he will never know health or peace. For as long as men massacre animals, they will kill each other. Indeed, he who sows the seed of murder and pain cannot reap joy and love.”
    Pythagoras

  • #4
    Tara Westover
    “We are all of us more complicated than the roles we are assigned in the stories other people tell”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #5
    Tara Westover
    “I began to experience the most powerful advantage of money: the ability to think of things besides money.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #6
    Tara Westover
    “The decisions I made after that moment were not the ones she would have made. They were the choices of a changed person, a new self.
    You could call this selfhood many things. Transformation. Metamorphosis. Falsity. Betrayal.
    I call it an education”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #7
    Tara Westover
    “Curiosity is a luxury for the financially secure.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #8
    Tara Westover
    “Whomever you become, whatever you make yourself into, that is who you always were.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #9
    Tara Westover
    “This is a magical place,” I said. “Everything shines here.” “You must stop yourself from thinking like that,” Dr. Kerry said, his voice raised. “You are not fool’s gold, shining only under a particular light. Whomever you become, whatever you make yourself into, that is who you always were. It was always in you. Not in Cambridge. In you. You are gold. And returning to BYU, or even to that mountain you came from, will not change who you are. It may change how others see you, it may even change how you see yourself—even gold appears dull in some lighting—but that is the illusion. And it always was.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #10
    Tara Westover
    “I carried the books to my room and read through the night. I loved the fiery pages of Mary Wollstonecraft, but there was a single line written by John Stuart Mill that, when I read it, moved the world: “It is a subject on which nothing final can be known.” The subject Mill had in mind was the nature of women. Mill claimed that women have been coaxed, cajoled, shoved and squashed into a series of feminine contortions for so many centuries, that it is now quite impossible to define their natural abilities or aspirations.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #11
    Tara Westover
    “I carried the books to my room and read through the night. I loved the fiery pages of Mary Wollstonecraft, but there was a single line written by John Stuart Mill that, when I read it, moved the world: "It is a subject on which nothing final can be known." The subject Mill had in mind was the nature of women. Mill claimed that women have been coaxed, cajoled, shoved and squashed into a series of feminine contortions for so many centuries, that it is now quite impossible to define their natural abilities or aspirations.

    Blood rushed to my brain; I felt an animating surge of adrenaline, of possibility, of a frontier being pushed outward. Of the nature of women, nothing final can be known. Never had I found such comfort in a void, in the black absence of knowledge. It seemed to say: whatever you are, you are woman.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #12
    Tara Westover
    “There was a pause, then more words appeared—words I hadn’t known I needed to hear, but once I saw them, I realized I’d been searching my whole life for them. You were my child. I should have protected you. I lived a lifetime in the moment I read those lines, a life that was not the one I had actually lived. I became a different person, who remembered a different childhood. I didn’t understand the magic of those words then, and I don’t understand it now. I know only this: that when my mother told me she had not been the mother to me that she wished she’d been, she became that mother for the first time.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #13
    Tara Westover
    “But sometimes I think we choose our illnesses, because they benefit us in some way.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #14
    Tara Westover
    “That peace did not come easily. I spent two years enumerating my father’s flaws, constantly updating the tally, as if reciting every resentment, every real and imagined act of cruelty, of neglect, would justify my decision to cut him from my life. Once justified, I thought the strangling guilt would release me and I could catch my breath. But vindication has no power over guilt. No amount of anger or rage directed at others can subdue it, because guilt is never about them. Guilt is the fear of one’s own wretchedness. It has nothing to do with other people. I shed my guilt when I accepted my decision on its own terms, without endlessly prosecuting old grievances, without weighing his sins against mine. Without thinking of my father at all. I learned to accept my decision for my own sake, because of me, not because of him. Because I needed it, not because he deserved it.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #15
    Tara Westover
    “The thing about having a mental breakdown is that no matter how obvious it is that you're having one, it is somehow not obvious to you.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #16
    Tara Westover
    “Despite the singularity of her childhood, the questions her book poses are universal: How much of ourselves should we give to those we love? And how much must we betray them to grow up?”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #17
    Tara Westover
    “What is a person to do, I asked, when their obligations to their family conflict with other obligations—to friends, to society, to themselves?”
    Tara Westover, Educated



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