Dion Lao > Dion's Quotes

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  • #1
    F.C. Yee
    “It’ll never get easier. If you had a strict rule, maybe, to always show mercy or always punish, you could use it as a shield to protect your spirit. But that would be distancing yourself from your duty. Determining the fates of others on a case-by-case basis, considering the infinite combinations of circumstance, will wear on you like rain on the mountain. Give it enough time, and you’ll bear the scars.” He spoke out of kindness and sorrow, perhaps not as immutable as he claimed to be. “You will never be perfectly fair, and you will never be truly correct,” Lao Ge said. “This is your burden.” To keep deciding, over and over again.”
    F.C. Yee, Avatar: The Rise of Kyoshi

  • #2
    F.C. Yee
    “You will never be perfectly fair, and you will never be truly correct,” Lao Ge said. “This is your burden.”
    F.C. Yee, Avatar: The Rise of Kyoshi

  • #3
    F.C. Yee
    “It was said that each Avatar was born in fitting times, to an era that needed them. Judging by its start, the era of Kyoshi would be marred by uncertainty, fear, and death, the only gifts she seemed capable of producing for the world. The people would never revere her like they did Yangchen or smile at her like they did Kuruk. Then let it be so, she thought. She would fight her ill fortune, her bad stars, and protect those who might despise her to the very end of her days.”
    F.C. Yee, Avatar: The Rise of Kyoshi

  • #4
    F.C. Yee
    “Weakness is practiced and learned as much as strength is!”
    F.C. Yee, The Shadow of Kyoshi

  • #5
    F.C. Yee
    “Enemies are enemies, but no one can shame you like your own family.”
    F.C. Yee, The Shadow of Kyoshi

  • #6
    F.C. Yee
    “She had the obligation to be more than the sum of her grievances with the world.”
    F.C. Yee, The Shadow of Kyoshi

  • #7
    F.C. Yee
    “Certain people... they turn you into what you were before.”
    F.C. Yee, The Shadow of Kyoshi

  • #8
    F.C. Yee
    “My friend is not a diplomat. She is the failure of diplomacy. She is the breakdown of negotiations. There is no escalation of hostilities beyond her.”
    F.C. Yee, The Shadow of Kyoshi

  • #9
    F.C. Yee
    “She wouldn’t allow herself to become a human scar, a compendium of personal loss. She had the obligation to be more than the sum of her grievances with the world.”
    F.C. Yee, Avatar: The Shadow of Kyoshi

  • #10
    Marie Brennan
    “When people speak of the tragedies in my life, they ordinarily mean the deaths. Not only Jacob. But all those around me who have perished. Whether in direct consequence of danger or simple misfortune and the passage of time after our friendships have formed. At times though I think these partings should be accounted as highly, if only in the ledger of my own sorrow. Akinimanbi did not die on a Lebane spear, but I never saw her again after leaving for the Great Cataract. In that sense I lost her as thoroughly as if she had died. So it was with Yeyuama as well. I only saw Faj Rawango once more, years later. And although Galinke corresponded with me, we could not be friends the way we might have been had we dwelt in the same land. So it has been, again and again throughout my life, as I form connections with people and then lose them to distance and time. I mourn those losses, even when I know my erstwhile friends are safe and happy among their own kin. But the only way for me to avoid such losses, would be to stay home. To never journey beyond the range of easy visitation. As my life will attest, that is not a measure I am willing to take. Nor would I forgo the pleasures of my transient friendships if I could. So we made our farewells, packed our things, and boarded a steamship in the harbor of Nsebu. Much browner, thinner and more worn than it had been when we arrived, we made our way back to Scirland.”
    Marie Brennan, The Tropic of Serpents



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