From Here to the Great Unknown Quotes

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From Here to the Great Unknown From Here to the Great Unknown by Lisa Marie Presley
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From Here to the Great Unknown Quotes Showing 1-30 of 66
“This was a huge lesson for me—the only way out is through. You must allow pain in to free yourself from it.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“Grief settles. It's not something you overcome. It's something that you live with. You adapt to it. Nothing about you is who you were. Nothing about how or what I used to think is important. The truth is that I don't remember who I was.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“I have a vague memory of this one conversation we had in that room about a passage that Elvis had underlined. I started to call someone to help me remember it, but realized that there's no one left to call”
Riley Keough, From Here to the Great Unknown
“When my brother died, I was hit with the realization that he was nowhere to be found on Earth. I could travel anywhere and never find him. No matter how far I flew, how far I drove, how far I walked, he was gone. I remember driving through Northern California and passing an immense expanse of empty farmland, and thinking that he wasn’t in there, either. He could never be found, no matter how hard I looked.”
Riley Keough, From Here to the Great Unknown
“She mothers my daughter through me.”
Riley Keough, From Here to the Great Unknown
“If you don’t have something to keep you focused, or some kind of purpose, it’s hard out there.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“I believe that a body is just a body, and the spirit is ultimately inside of the physical shell, and I don’t think chemicals have anything to do with the spirit. They make the physical addiction to the body—but the root of the addiction comes from being really unhappy. That’s a spiritual problem.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“He was respectful, though—he wasn’t rude to people, he wasn’t an angry person, he didn’t live there. Some people full-on live in destruction, others buy some real estate and walk around in anger for a little while. My dad would just visit.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“Then they took me home to Graceland.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“Looking back, there was really only one thing I was sure of: that I was loved by my dad.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“My father was my mom’s biggest protector throughout her whole adult life. She had many friends that came and went, but he was there from when she was seventeen until the moment she died. He was the last person with her.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“In my family, there’s a long history of young girls becoming mothers—my great-grandmother, my grandmother, and my mother all had their first babies young, when they were just babies themselves.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“Eventually, he calmed down, and someone said to me, “It’s okay, you can come out now, he wants to see you.” I thought, He wants to see me? I said, “Why was he so mad?” “Well,” someone said, “he ran out of water.” So, I grabbed four bottles of water and I walked into his room. “Somebody told me you didn’t have any water,” I said, and he just motioned for me to come give him a hug.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“In California, when I was with my mother, I had a nanny named Yuki Koshimata. Yuki was a short Japanese woman, and she took really good care of me. She was always there—she wrote to me until the day she died. I would get cards every Christmas, every birthday, even after I got married and had children. Whenever we dropped Yuki off at her house for her weekend, or her time off, I would scream. I remember being in the car with my mom driving away and I would be screaming at the top of my lungs, watching us drive out of view of her. I was so attached to her.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“Back then, everyone in Hollywood seemed to be an addict, but no one had a language for it.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“I was so afraid to hear my mother’s voice - the physical connection we have to the voices of our loved ones is profound. I decided to lie in my bed because I know how heavy grief makes my body feel.”
Riley Keough, From Here to the Great Unknown
“Once the gates closed, Graceland was like its own city, its own jurisdiction. My dad was the chief of police, and everybody was ranked. There were a few laws and rules, but mostly not.”
Riley Keough, From Here to the Great Unknown
“Or that I'm so strong. That's the thing that I hear. Which makes me so crazy. Because that makes me go, 'what for though?”
Riley Keough, From Here to the Great Unknown
“If I look back at everything, my whole life, I can just lose it. Try, fail, try, fail, good, bad, fail. I get really overwhelmed and start crying, looking at how fucked up my life has been. Sometimes it feels like there’s nothing left, no purpose. Like there’s nothing I want to accomplish anymore. No goal, no anything. Zero. I have three remaining children, so I fight it, I fight it, I fight it, I fight it, I fight it. But it’s fucking there, alive and well. It’s a lion’s roar and I have to shut it down, shut it up. I’m surprised I’m still alive. I can’t believe I’m still standing. It feels wrong to be alive without Ben.”
Riley Keough, From Here to the Great Unknown
“He could have said, “Chop both of your feet off,” and I would have done it.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“Don't kill your best friend, he (Elvis) said. Words of wisdom.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“I know that I acted like a princess sometimes. But it’s strange, because I was—am—filled with self-doubt. It was all very confusing.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“After Ben Ben died, I knew my mom wouldn’t survive it for very long. She did not want to be here.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“We had to keep the room at 55 degrees. I still didn’t know where I was going to bury him—Hawaii, Graceland, Hawaii, Graceland—so that was part of why it took so long. But I got so used to him, caring for him and keeping him there. I think it would scare the living fucking piss out of anybody else to have their son there like that. But not me. The normal process of death is: The person dies, they have an autopsy, viewing, funeral, buried, boom. It’s all over in a four- or five-day period, maybe a week if you’re lucky. But you don’t really have a chance to process it. I felt so fortunate that there was a way that I could still parent him, delay it a bit longer so that I could become okay with laying him to rest.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“When Ben died, I thought it would be a matter of hours until my mother relapsed. But she surprised me and remained completely sober to honor him. She really wanted to get her life together and help others somehow. She wanted to be of service. But she was too broken. My mom had my brother in the house with us instead of keeping him at the morgue. They told us that if we could tend to the body, we could have him at home, so she kept him in our house for a while on dry ice. It was really important for my mom to have ample time to say goodbye to him, the same way she’d done with her dad. And I would go and sit in there with him.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“He’d still come into my room now and then, but I would move or do something to make him think that I was waking up, then he’d run down the hallway back to my mom’s room, freak out, and stay away.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“The first time Edwards came into my room in the middle of the night, drunk, kneeling, was years before. I think I was ten. I woke up to find him on his knees next to my bed, running his finger up my leg under the sheets, and if I moved, he stopped—so I moved. I was awake, but I was trying to be asleep. He said he was going to teach me what was going to happen when I get older. He was putting his hand on my chest and saying a man’s going to touch here, then he put his hand between my legs, and he said they’re going to touch you here. I think he gently kissed me and then left that night.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“One night my mom made dinner, and when I cut into the chicken, it wasn’t cooked, so I said so. The next thing I know, Edwards flipped his plate so that it flew across the room and smashed into the wall. I threw my hands up as if to say, “What the fuck?” and at that he jumped up and started screaming gibberish and ran out of the room. When he got back, he was holding the end of the cord that attached to my record player—he’d cut it off with scissors. He was still yelling.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“In the craziest turn of events, Edwards got a part in the movie Mommie Dearest, playing Joan Crawford’s lover. One day, while he was still making the movie, my mom came into my room, went through my closet, and was yelling at me because I had wire hangers: “Why are you using these? These come from the cleaners! These need to be exchanged for the nice ones, the plastic ones!” As she was yelling, we could hear laughter from down the hallway. “The irony!” Michael shouted. “This is too crazy that you’re actually yelling at your daughter about wire hangers and I’m in Mommie Dearest!” My mom realized that it was crazy and started laughing, too. I thought, This is my life now. You’re both fucking crazy.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown
“By this point in my life, my mother’s role was just to be a chronic stop sign. She didn’t try to talk to me, hang out with me, be a friend. I was very much in love with my father’s side—they were wildly colorful people and I related to them in ways I couldn’t with my mother.”
Lisa Marie Presley, From Here to the Great Unknown

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