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A Long Way Home A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley
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A Long Way Home Quotes Showing 1-30 of 32
“My mother described her reactions better than I ever could mine: she said she was "surprised with thunder" that her boy had come back, and that the happiness in her heart was "as deep as the sea".”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“I feel strongly that from my being a little lost boy with no family to becoming a man with two, everything was meant to happen just the way it happened. And I am profoundly humbled by that thought.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“I’d had to learn some of these differences, too. Mum remembers taking me somewhere in the car once when I looked at her and said, “Lady no drive.” She pulled over and said, “If lady no drive, then boy walk!” I quickly learned my lesson.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“My return seemed to inspire and energize the neighborhood, as though it was evidence that the hard luck of life did not have to rule you. Sometimes miracles do happen.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“Not having enough to eat paralyzes you and keeps you living hour by hour instead of thinking about what you would like to accomplish in a day, week, month, or year. Hunger and poverty steal your childhood and take away your innocence and sense of security. But”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“We all reach a point as young adults when we wonder what we should be doing with our lives—or, at the very least, which direction to point ourselves in. Beyond the means to get by, we need to think about what’s most important to us. Not surprisingly, I discovered that for me the answer was family.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“Mum had decided that there was nothing sacrosanct about families formed only by birth parents. Though brought up Catholic, she and Dad thought the world had enough children born into it already, with many millions of them in dire need. They agreed that there were other ways to create a family beyond having children themselves.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“She also said she was proud of me, which is all anyone can wish to hear from his mother. The”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“I’d learned quickly, as a matter of survival, that I needed to take opportunities as they came—if they came—and to look forward to the future.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“Hunger and poverty steal your childhood and take away your innocence and sense of security. But I was one of the lucky ones because I not only survived but learned to thrive. •”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“Just the thought of being able to ask for more food with the expectation of receiving it made me happy and built up my excitement to an almost unbearable pitch. It seemed that we were about to embark on the adventure of our lives. •”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“Sometimes it felt as if the world had forgotten about us and our problems.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“birdwatching or sailing. Dad often took me out on his small catamaran, which only increased my love of the water, and I finally learned to swim. Just being able to look out at the horizon gave me peace of”
Saroo Brierley, Lion: A Long Way Home Young Readers' Edition
“Adoptees, whether or not they ever knew their birth parents, often describe the constant, gnawing feeling of there being something missing: without a connection, or at least the knowledge of where they are from, they feel incomplete.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“One of the most touching things my mother said to me was that if I ever wanted to come back to live in India, she would build me a home and go out and work hard so that I could be happy.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“carrying laborer to teacher and manager. It seems a bittersweet result of the family’s loss that the remaining children had managed to lift themselves out of poverty.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“Hunger limits you because you are constantly thinking about getting food, keeping the food if you do get your hands on some, and not knowing when you are going to eat next.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“was a juvenile detention centre, called Liluah, housing”
Saroo Brierley, Lion: A Long Way Home
“I was about to embark on a high-tech version of what I'd done in my first week there, twenty years ago, randomly taking trains out to see if they went back home. I took a deep breath, chose a train line, and started scrolling along it.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“The world of adults was closed to me, so I continued to try to solve my problem by myself.”
Saroo Brierley, Lion: A Long Way Home
“surprised to find that it had both Burhanpur and Khandwa marked on it. To her they seemed so far away from Kolkata that she wondered whether it was possible I could have traveled that distance. It was almost all the way across an enormous country. The first thing that hit me was that my home had been marked on the map above my desk the whole time, if I’d only known where to look. How many times had I looked at all those names, not knowing their secrets? I don’t remember if I ever noticed Burhanpur among the several similar names on the map when I was younger; if I had, I’d obviously written it off, probably as being too far from Kolkata. And that was the second thing—it was much farther than I thought possible. Was it too far? Did the trains go much faster than everyone had allowed for? Or had I been on the train for longer than I thought? Two surreal days passed. I was stuck between maps and memories. The things I’d always been so certain about were dissolving in the face of what I’d found. Were my greatest fears coming to fruition? Would the search erode what I thought I knew and leave me with nothing? My parents, Lisa, and I didn’t talk much more about my breakthrough over the next couple of days, and I wondered whether they were being overly cautious or waiting for me”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“Van toen af aan heb ik gedacht dat we huilen omdat ons lichaam iets probeert te verwerken wat ons hart en verstand te veel is.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“imagined what I’d do when I reached this stage. It now seems absurd, but I suppose I thought I’d find a town labelled ‘Ginestlay’ and that would be that; I’d know I’d found home. But nothing else had worked out as I thought it would – this town was well outside my search boundary, and after all my careful planning and methodical efforts I’d found it by accident. It”
Saroo Brierley, Lion: A Long Way Home
“zigzagged”
Saroo Brierley, Lion: A Long Way Home
“Self-pity was a deep well that if I once fell into, I might never get out.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“The necklace was more than just a beautiful object to call my own; for me, it was a concrete demonstration that there were good people in the world who were trying to help me. I still have it and it’s one of my most treasured possessions.”
Saroo Brierley, Lion: A Long Way Home
“hanging”
Saroo Brierley, Lion: A Long Way Home Young Readers' Edition
“The idea of having possessions took some getting used to.”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“For the first time, I told Mum that the place I was from was called “Ginestlay,” and when”
Saroo Brierley, A Long Way Home
“Uno no puede aguantar indefinidamente en el pánico y el terror, y ambos habían cerrado su ciclo. Desde entonces, creo que si lloramos es por eso, porque el cuerpo se encarga de lo que la mente y el corazón ya no pueden absorber por sí mismos. Todas aquellas lágrimas habían cumplido su función: había dejado que mi cuerpo se ocupara de mis emociones y, sorprendentemente, empezaba a sentirme un poco mejor.

No tenía acceso al mundo de los adultos, así que seguí intentando resolver mi problema por mis propios medios.”
SAROO BRIERLEY, A Long Way Home

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