Lindsey > Lindsey's Quotes

Showing 1-9 of 9
sort by

  • #1
    Martin Amis
    “And meanwhile time goes about its immemorial work of making everyone look and feel like shit.”
    Martin Amis, London Fields

  • #2
    David Foster Wallace
    “To me, at least in retrospect, the really interesting question is why dullness proves to be such a powerful impediment to attention. Why we recoil from the dull. Maybe it’s because dullness is intrinsically painful; maybe that’s where phrases like ‘deadly dull’ or ‘excruciatingly dull’ come from. But there might be more to it. Maybe dullness is associated with psychic pain because something that’s dull or opaque fails to provide enough stimulation to distract people from some other, deeper type of pain that is always there, if only in an ambient, low-level way, and which most of us spend nearly all our time and energy trying to distract ourselves from feeling, or at least from feeling directly or with our full attention. Admittedly, the whole thing’s pretty confusing, and hard to talk about abstractly…but surely something must lie behind not just Muzak in dull or tedious places any more but now also actual TV in waiting rooms, supermarkets’ checkouts, airport gates, SUVs’ backseats. Walkman, iPods, BlackBerries, cell phones that attach to your head. This terror of silence with nothing diverting to do. I can’t think anyone really believes that today’s so-called ‘information society’ is just about information. Everyone knows it’s about something else, way down.”
    David Foster Wallace

  • #3
    Michael Pollan
    “Rule No.37 The whiter the bread, the sooner you’ll be dead.”
    Michael Pollan

  • #4
    Arthur Conan Doyle
    “A dog reflects the family life. Whoever saw a frisky dog in a gloomy family, or a sad dog in a happy one? Snarling people have snarling dogs, dangerous people have dangerous ones.”
    Arthur Conan Doyle, The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes

  • #5
    Norm Macdonald
    “Death is a funny thing. Not funny haha, like a Woody Allen movie, but funny strange, like a Woody Allen marriage.”
    Norm Macdonald, Based on a True Story

  • #6
    Norm Macdonald
    “I could not ignore their withering glances. They looked at me the way real vampires look at Count Chocula.”
    Norm Macdonald, Based on a True Story

  • #7
    David Foster Wallace
    “For some reason now I am thinking of the sort of philanthropist who seems humanly repellent not in spite of his charity but because of it: on some level you can tell that he views the recipients of his charity not as persons so much as pieces of exercise equipment on which he can develop and demonstrate his own virtue. What's creepy and repellent is that this sort of philanthropist clearly needs privation and suffering to continue, since it is his own virtue he prizes, instead of the ends to which the virtue is ostensibly directed.”
    David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

  • #8
    John Steinbeck
    “Perhaps the most overrated virtue in our list of shoddy virtues is that of giving. Giving builds up the ego of the giver, makes him superior and higher and larger than the receiver. Nearly always, giving is a selfish pleasure, and in many cases it is a downright destructive and evil thing. One has only to remember some of our wolfish financiers who spend two-thirds of their lives clawing fortunes out of the guts of society and the latter third pushing it back. It is not enough to suppose that their philanthropy is a kind of frightened restitution, or that their natures change when they have enough. Such a nature never has enough and natures do not change that readily. I think that the impulse is the same in both cases. For giving can bring the same sense of superiority as getting does, and philanthropy may be another kind of spiritual avarice.”
    John Steinbeck, The Log from the Sea of Cortez

  • #9
    “There's a new kind of Giving-
    I remember when Philanthropy was inconspicuous and anonymous.
    Now it has turned in to " Look at me, I just saved the world" kind of show.”
    Charmaine J Forde



Rss