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  • #1
    Robin Hobb
    “Useless to worry until we find ourselves blocked. ... If it happens, then we must simply find a way around it. It may slow us down. But we will never get there at all if we stand still and worry.”
    Robin Hobb, Assassin's Quest

  • #2
    Robin Hobb
    “...To free humanity of time. For time is the great enslaver of us all. Time that ages us, time that limits us. Think how often you have wished to have more time for something, or wished you could go back a day and do something differently. When humanity is freed of time, old wrongs can be corrected before they are done.”
    Robin Hobb, Assassin's Quest

  • #3
    Portia de Rossi
    “I finally understood that by being on a perpetual diet, I had practiced a "disordered" form of eating my whole life. I restricted when I was hungry and in need of nutrition and binged when I was so grotesquely full I couldn't be comfortable in any position by lying down. Diets that tell people what to eat or when to eat are the practices inbetween. And dieting, I discovered, was another form of disordered eating, just as anorexia and bulimia similarly disrupt the natural order of eating.”
    Portia de Rossi, Unbearable Lightness: A Story of Loss and Gain

  • #4
    Portia de Rossi
    “I began to see myself as someone who can help others understand diversity rather than feeling like a social outcast. Ellen taught me to not care about other people's opinions. She taught me to be truthful. She taught me to be free. I began to live my life in love and complete acceptance. For the first time I had truly accepted myself.”
    Portia de Rossi, Unbearable Lightness: A Story of Loss and Gain

  • #5
    Portia de Rossi
    “You don't have to be emaciated or vomiting to be suffering. All people who live their lives on a diet are suffering.”
    Portia de Rossi, Unbearable Lightness: A Story of Loss and Gain

  • #6
    Viktor E. Frankl
    “We who lived in concentration camps can remember the men who walked through the huts comforting others, giving away their last piece of bread. They may have been few in number, but they offer sufficient proof that everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms -- to choose one's attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one's own way.”
    Viktor E. Frankl

  • #7
    Viktor E. Frankl
    “It did not really matter what we expected from life, but rather what life expected from us. We needed to stop asking about the meaning of life, and instead to think of ourselves as those who were being questioned by life—daily and hourly. Our answer must consist, not in talk and meditation, but in right action and in right conduct. Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to its problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individual.”
    Viktor E. Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning

  • #9
    Luke Rhinehart
    “New places and new roles forced me into acute awareness of how others were responding to me. When a human is being himself, flowing with his inner nature, wearing his natural appropriate masks, integrated with his environment, he is normally unaware of subtleties in another's behavior. Only if the other person breaks a conventional pattern is awareness stimulated. However, breaking my established patterns was threatening to my deeply ingrained selves and pricked me to a lvel of consciousness which is unusual, unusual since the whole instinct of human behavior is to find environments congenial to the relaxation of consciousness. By creating problems for myself I created thought.”
    Luke Rhinehart, The Dice Man

  • #10
    Luke Rhinehart
    “Why did children seem to be so often spontaneous, joy-filled and concentrated while adults seemed controlled, anxiety-filled and diffused? It was the Goddam sense of having a self.”
    Luke Rhinehart, The Dice Man

  • #11
    Luke Rhinehart
    “Man must become comfortable in flowing from one role to another, one set of values to another, one life to another. Men must be free from boundaries, patterns and consistencies in order to be free to think, feel and create in new ways. Men have admired Prometheus and Mars too long; our God must become Proteus.”
    Luke Rhinehart, The Dice Man

  • #12
    Luke Rhinehart
    “Patterns are prostitution to the patter of parents.”
    Luke Rhinehart, The Dice Man

  • #13
    Marcel Proust
    “But sometimes illumination comes to our rescue at the very moment when all seems lost; we have knocked at every door and they open on nothing until, at last, we stumble unconsciously against the only one through which we can enter the kingdom we have sought in vain a hundred years - and it opens.”
    Marcel Proust, In Search of Lost Time

  • #14
    Marcel Proust
    “Our desires cut across one another, and in this confused existence it is rare for happiness to coincide with the desire that clamoured for it.”
    Marcel Proust, Within a Budding Grove

  • #15
    Marcel Proust
    “One cannot change, that is to say become a different person, while continuing to acquiesce to the feelings of the person one has ceased to be.”
    Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way

  • #16
    Marcel Proust
    “To achieve accurate knowledge of others, if such a thing were possible, we could only ever arrive at it through the slow and unsure recognition of our own initial optical inaccuracies. However, such knowledge is not possible: for, while our vision of others is being adjusted, they, who are not made of mere brute matter, are also changing; we think we have managed to see them more clearly, but they shift; and when we believe we have them fully in focus, it is merely our older images of them that we have clarified, but which are themselves already out of date.”
    Marcel Proust, In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower

  • #17
    Marcel Proust
    “A little tap at the window, as though some missile had struck it, followed by a plentiful, falling sound, as light, though, as if a shower of sand were being sprinkled from a window overhead; then the fall spread, took on an order, a rhythm, became liquid, loud, drumming, musical, innumerable, universal. It was the rain”
    Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way

  • #18
    Marcel Proust
    “For often I have wished to see a person again without realising that it was simply because that personal recalled to me a hedge of hawthorns in blossom, and I have been led to believe, and to make someone else believe, in a renewal of affection, by what was no more than an inclination to travel.”
    Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way

  • #19
    Marcel Proust
    “The bonds between ourselves and another person exists only in our minds. Memory as it grows fainter loosens them, and notwithstanding the illusion by which we want to be duped and which, out of love, friendship, politeness, deference, duty, we dupe other people, we exist alone. Man is the creature who cannot escape from himself, who knows other people only in himself, and when he asserts the contrary, he is lying.”
    Marcel Proust, In Search of Lost Time

  • #20
    Marcel Proust
    “Knowledge of the thing cannot impede it; but at least we have the things we discover, if not in our hands, at least in thought, and there they are at your disposal, which inspires us to the illusory hope of enjoying a kind of dominion over them.”
    Marcel Proust, Swann's Way

  • #21
    Marcel Proust
    “We have such numerous interests in our lives that it is not uncommon, on a single occasion, for the foundations of a happiness that does not yet exist to be laid down alongside the intensification of a grief from which we are still suffering.”
    Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way

  • #22
    Marcel Proust
    “For what we suppose to be our love or our jealousy is never a single, continuous and indivisible passion. It is composed of an infinity of successive loves, of different jealousies, each of which is ephemeral, although by their uninterrupted multiplicity they give us the impression of continuity, the illusion of unity.”
    Marcel Proust, Swann’s Way

  • #23
    Marcel Proust
    “You cannot be surprised at anything men do, they're such brutes.”
    Marcel Proust, In the Shadow of Young Girls in Flower

  • #24
    A.A. Milne
    “You can't stay in your corner of the Forest waiting for others to come to you. You have to go to them sometimes.”
    A.A. Milne, Winnie-the-Pooh

  • #25
    Philip K. Dick
    “Fear can make you do more wrong than hate or jealousy. If you’re afraid you don’t commit yourself to life completely; fear makes you always, always hold something back. You shouldn’t be alone. It’s killing you; it’s undermining you. All the time, every day, you should be somewhere with people.”
    Philip K. Dick, Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said

  • #26
    John Greenleaf Whittier
    “Of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these, 'It might have been.”
    John Greenleaf Whittier

  • #27
    Henry David Thoreau
    “The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation.”
    Henry David Thoreau, Walden or, Life in the Woods

  • #28
    William Shakespeare
    “Last scene of all that ends this strange, eventful history,
    is second childishness and mere oblivion.
    I am sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.”
    William Shakespeare, As You Like It

  • #29
    Hugh Laurie
    “It's a terrible thing, I think, in life to wait until you're ready. I have this feeling now that actually no one is ever ready to do anything. There is almost no such thing as ready. There is only now. And you may as well do it now. Generally speaking, now is as good a time as any.”
    Hugh Laurie

  • #30
    Vironika Tugaleva
    “You are nature. You are already perfect, peaceful, and powerful. You don’t need to become anything. You simply need to remember yourself.”
    Vironika Tugaleva

  • #31
    Hanya Yanagihara
    “What does Malcolm have to worry about?" JB would ask them when Malcolm was anxious about something, but he knew: he was worried because to be alive was to worry. Life was scary; it was unknowable. Even Malcolm's money wouldn't immunize him completely. Life would happen to him, and he would have to try to answer it, just like the rest of them. They all--Malcolm with his houses, Willem with his girlfriends, JB with his paints, he with his razors--sought comfort, something that was theirs alone, something to hold off the terrifying largeness, the impossibility, of the world, of the relentlessness of its minutes, its hours, its days.”
    Hanya Yanagihara, A Little Life



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