Hadley & Grace Quotes

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Hadley & Grace Hadley & Grace by Suzanne Redfearn
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Hadley & Grace Quotes Showing 1-23 of 23
“There is no going back. One decision leads to the next and then the next, a continual stumbling forward over each past mistake until you find yourself someplace entirely different from where you started or from where you ever intended to go.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“Smiling doesn’t mean she doesn’t care. It’s only a symptom of life carrying on, which inevitably it does. No matter how cataclysmic the events, and even in light of the worst tragedies, hearts continue to beat, lungs continue to draw air, and sometimes things continue to be funny. Some pain changes you, alters you permanently and tattoos your soul. “Forever pain,” her grandmother called it, but amazingly you still live through it. And eventually, even forever pain recedes and grows less sharp. You wake up one day to discover it no longer fills every corner of your mind. It’s still there, lurking in the background, but it’s less present and pronounced, a throb deep within you that almost takes focus to feel.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“Smiling doesn’t mean she doesn’t care. It’s only a symptom of life carrying on, which inevitably it does. No matter how cataclysmic the events, and even in light of the worst tragedies, hearts continue to beat, lungs continue to draw air, and sometimes things continue to be funny. Some pain changes you, alters you permanently and tattoos your soul.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“One decision leads to the next and then the next, a continual stumbling forward over each past mistake until you find yourself someplace entirely different from where you started or from where you ever intended to go.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“And eventually, even forever pain recedes and grows less sharp. You wake up one day to discover it no longer fills every corner of your mind. It’s still there, lurking in the background, but it’s less present and pronounced, a throb deep within you that almost takes focus to feel.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“Some pain changes you, alters you permanently and tattoos your soul. “Forever pain,” her grandmother called it, but amazingly you still live through it.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“It amazes her that five months ago this little guy didn’t exist. How is that possible when her entire world now revolves around him, this erupting bundle of life?”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“Some pain changes you, alters you permanently and tattoos your soul. “Forever pain,” her grandmother called it, but amazingly you still live through it. And eventually, even forever pain recedes and grows less sharp. You wake up one day to discover it no longer fills every corner of your mind. It’s still there, lurking in the background, but it’s less present and pronounced, a throb deep within you that almost takes focus to feel.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“One catastrophe at a time, Grace thinks. It was one of her grandmother’s favorite sayings. She’ll deal with the next calamity after she gets through this one.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“Bless us, oh Lord, and these Thy gifts, which we are about to receive from Thy bounty, through Christ, our Lord. Amen.” “Amen,” they say together.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“I said I LOVE U.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“their”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“Some pain changes you, alters you permanently and tattoos your soul. “Forever pain,” her grandmother called it, but amazingly you still live through it. And eventually, even forever pain recedes and grows less sharp. You wake up one day to discover it no longer fills every corner of your mind. It’s still there, lurking in the background, but it’s less present and pronounced, a throb deep within you that almost takes focus to feel. Jimmy”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“She wants to tell her it’s okay. Smiling doesn’t mean she doesn’t care. It’s only a symptom of life carrying on, which inevitably it does. No matter how cataclysmic the events, and even in light of the worst tragedies, hearts continue to beat, lungs continue to draw air, and sometimes things continue to be funny.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“It’s one thing to suck at cooking or sewing or making small talk, but to suck at being a mom, that’s got to be the worst failing in the world. And so not fair to Miles. He deserves so much better.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“But you’re tired and he’s tired, and there’s nothing you can do tonight that can’t be done in the morning.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“One foot in front of the other, she tells herself as she heads down the stairs. Repeat as often as necessary to finish. Someone famous said that. She can’t remember who.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“Today is not forever. It’s just today.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“Hang in there, kiddo,” she says. “Today is not forever. It’s just today.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“No matter how cataclysmic the events, and even in light of the worst tragedies, hearts continue to beat, lungs continue to draw air, and sometimes things continue to be funny.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“Time is a thief, she thinks. You believe you have an infinite amount of it, but then you blink and everything that was has been replaced with something else entirely.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“Christ,” Grace says.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace
“she turned into a trembling pool of putty, constantly on the verge of losing it and so tired she couldn’t think straight—”
Suzanne Redfearn, Hadley & Grace