β
My experience of life is that it is not divided up into genres; itβs a horrifying, romantic, tragic, comical, science-fiction cowboy detective novel. You know, with a bit of pornography if you're lucky.
β
β
Alan Moore
β
Trying to define yourself is like trying to bite your own teeth.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
People shouldn't be afraid of their government. Governments should be afraid of their people.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
What she was finding also was how one book led to another, doors kept opening wherever she turned and the days weren't long enough for the reading she wanted to do.
β
β
Alan Bennett (The Uncommon Reader)
β
Your assumptions are your windows on the world. Scrub them off every once in a while, or the light won't come in.
β
β
Alan Alda
β
Behind this mask there is more than just flesh. Beneath this mask there is an idea... and ideas are bulletproof.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
The best moments in reading are when you come across something β a thought, a feeling, a way of looking at things β which you had thought special and particular to you. Now here it is, set down by someone else, a person you have never met, someone even who is long dead. And it is as if a hand has come out and taken yours.
β
β
Alan Bennett (The History Boys)
β
Man suffers only because he takes seriously what the gods made for fun.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
Sorrow is better than fear. Fear is a journey, a terrible journey. But, sorrow is at least an arriving.
β
β
Alan Paton
β
Everybody is special. Everybody. Everybody is a hero, a lover, a fool, a villain. Everybody. Everybody has their story to tell.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Artists use lies to tell the truth. Yes, I created a lie. But because you believed it, you found something true about yourself.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
This is the real secret of life -- to be completely engaged with what you are doing in the here and now. And instead of calling it work, realize it is play.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
We seldom realize, for example that our most private thoughts and emotions are not actually our own. For we think in terms of languages and images which we did not invent, but which were given to us by our society.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
The meaning of life is just to be alive. It is so plain and so obvious and so simple. And yet, everybody rushes around in a great panic as if it were necessary to achieve something beyond themselves.
β
β
Alan W. Watts (The Culture of Counter-Culture: Edited Transcripts (Love of Wisdom))
β
You wear a mask for so long, you forget who you were beneath it.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Muddy water is best cleared by leaving it alone.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
Suppose time is a circle, bending back on itself. The world repeats itself, precisely, endlessly.
β
β
Alan Lightman (Einsteinβs Dreams)
β
The past can't hurt you anymore, not unless you let it.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Knowledge, like air, is vital to life. Like air, no one should be denied it.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
To have faith is to trust yourself to the water. When you swim you don't grab hold of the water, because if you do you will sink and drown. Instead you relax, and float.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
The only way to make sense out of change is to plunge into it, move with it, and join the dance.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
You are an aperture through which the universe is looking at and exploring itself.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
Remember, remember the fifth of November of gunpowder treason and plot. I know of no reason why the gun powder treason should ever be forgot.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Heard joke once: Man goes to doctor. Says he's depressed. Says life seems harsh and cruel. Says he feels all alone in a threatening world where what lies ahead is vague and uncertain. Doctor says, "Treatment is simple. Great clown Pagliacci is in town tonight. Go and see him. That should pick you up." Man bursts into tears. Says, "But doctor...I am Pagliacci.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
The menu is not the meal.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
You are a function of what the whole universe is doing in the same way that a wave is a function of what the whole ocean is doing.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
I have realized that the past and future are real illusions, that they exist in the present, which is what there is and all there is.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
Sometimes it is the people no one can imagine anything of who do the things no one can imagine.
β
β
Alan M. Turing
β
All we ever see of stars are their old photographs.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
Through our eyes, the universe is perceiving itself. Through our ears, the universe is listening to its harmonies. We are the witnesses through which the universe becomes conscious of its glory, of its magnificence.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
As I stood outside in Cow Lane, it occurred to me that Heaven must be a place where the library is open twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.
No ... eight days a week.
β
β
Alan Bradley (The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (Flavia de Luce, #1))
β
All it takes is one bad day to reduce the sanest man alive to lunacy. That's how far the world is from where I am. Just one bad day.
β
β
Alan Moore (Batman: The Killing Joke)
β
Happiness is the most insidious prison of all.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
The more a thing tends to be permanent, the more it tends to be lifeless.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
None of you understand. I'm not locked up in here with YOU. You're locked up in here with ME.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
My mother said I broke her heart...but it was my integrity that was important. Is that so selfish? It sells for so little, but it's all we have left in this place. It is the very last inch of us...but within that inch we are free.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
I have always found that actively loving
saves one from a morbid preoccupation
with the shortcomings of society.
β
β
Alan Paton
β
Try to imagine what it will be like to go to sleep and never wake up... now try to imagine what it was like to wake up having never gone to sleep.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
Books are not about passing time. They're about other lives. Other worlds. Far from wanting time to pass, one just wishes one had more of it. If one wanted to pass the time one could go to New Zealand.
β
β
Alan Bennett (The Uncommon Reader)
β
No. Not even in the face of Armageddon. Never compromise.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
Problems that remain persistently insoluble should always be suspected as questions asked in the wrong way.
β
β
Alan W. Watts (The Book: On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are)
β
Love your rage, not your cage.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
God is in the rain.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Things are as they are. Looking out into the universe at night, we make no comparisons between right and wrong stars, nor between well and badly arranged constellations.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
I shall die here. Every last inch of me shall perish. Except one. An inch. It's small and it's fragile and it's the only thing in the world worth having. we must never lose it, or sell it, or give it away. We must never let them take it from us.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
They say that life's a game, & then they take the board away.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Our masters have not heard the people's voice for generations and it is much, much louder than they care to remember.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
A scholar tries to learn something everyday; a student of Buddhism tries to unlearn something daily.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
The art of living... is neither careless drifting on the one hand nor fearful clinging to the past on the other. It consists in being sensitive to each moment, in regarding it as utterly new and unique, in having the mind open and wholly receptive.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
We gaze continually at the world and it grows dull in our perceptions. Yet seen from another's vantage point, as if new, it may still take the breath away.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
We're all puppets, Laurie. I'm just a puppet who can see the strings.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
Every intelligent individual wants to know what makes him tick, and yet is at once fascinated and frustrated by the fact that oneself is the most difficult of all things to know.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
If I have to have a past, then I prefer it to be multiple choice.
β
β
Alan Moore (Batman: The Killing Joke)
β
The past can't hurt you anymore. Not unless you let it. They made you into a victim, Evey. They made you into a statistic. But, that's not the real you. That's not who you are inside.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
It seems strange that my life should end in such a terrible place, but for three years I had roses, and apologized to no one.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
There's a notion I'd like to see buried: the ordinary person. Ridiculous. There is no ordinary person.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
Since mankind's dawn, a handful of oppressors have accepted the responsibility over our lives that we should have accepted for ourselves. By doing so, they took our power. By doing nothing, we gave it away. We've seen where their way leads, through camps and wars, towards the slaughterhouse.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
When we attempt to exercise power or control over someone else, we cannot avoid giving that person the very same power or control over us.
β
β
Alan W. Watts (The Way of Zen)
β
A book is a device to ignite the imagination.
β
β
Alan Bennett (The Uncommon Reader)
β
Never pretend to a love which you do not actually feel, for love is not ours to command.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
Why do we argue? Life's so fragile, a successful virus clinging to a speck of mud, suspended in endless nothing.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
Once you realize what a joke everything is, being the Comedian is the only thing that makes sense.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
We do not "come into" this world; we come out of it, as leaves from a tree. As the ocean "waves," the universe "peoples." Every individual is an expression of the whole realm of nature, a unique action of the total universe.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
I know you think you understand what you thought I said but I'm not sure you realize that what you heard is not what I meant
β
β
Alan Greenspan
β
Life is like music for its own sake. We are living in an eternal now, and when we listen to music we are not listening to the past, we are not listening to the future, we are listening to an expanded present.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
So when you find yourself locked onto an unpleasant train of thought, heading for the places in your past where the screaming is unbearable, remember there's always madness. Madness is the emergency exit.
β
β
Alan Moore (Batman: The Killing Joke)
β
VI VERI VENIVERSUM VIVUS VICI.
By the Power of Truth, I, while living, have Conquered the Universe.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta #2)
β
Zen does not confuse spirituality with thinking about God while one is peeling potatoes. Zen spirituality is just to peel the potatoes.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
It is the oldest ironies that are still the most satisfying: man, when preparing for bloody war, will orate loudly and most eloquently in the name of peace.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
Your pretty empire took so long to build, now, with a snap of history's fingers, down it goes.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
There is no future. There is no past. Do you see? Time is simultaneous, an intricately structured jewel that humans insist on viewing one edge at a time, when the whole design is visible in every facet.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
Sexually progressive cultures gave us literature, philosophy, civilization and the rest, while sexually restrictive cultures gave us the Dark Ages and the Holocaust.
β
β
Alan Moore (25,000 Years of Erotic Freedom)
β
We can only see a short distance ahead, but we can see plenty there that needs to be done.
β
β
Alan M. Turing (Computing machinery and intelligence)
β
There's no flesh or blood within this cloak to kill. There's only an idea. Ideas are bulletproof.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
The ending is nearer than you think, and it is already written. All that we have left to choose is the correct moment to begin.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Advice? I donβt have advice. Stop aspiring and start writing. If youβre writing, youβre a writer. Write like youβre a goddamn death row inmate and the governor is out of the country and thereβs no chance for a pardon. Write like youβre clinging to the edge of a cliff, white knuckles, on your last breath, and youβve got just one last thing to say, like youβre a bird flying over us and you can see everything, and please, for Godβs sake, tell us something that will save us from ourselves. Take a deep breath and tell us your deepest, darkest secret, so we can wipe our brow and know that weβre not alone. Write like you have a message from the king. Or donβt. Who knows, maybe youβre one of the lucky ones who doesnβt have to.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
Equality and freedom are not luxuries to lightly cast aside. Without them, order cannot long endure before approaching depths beyond imagining.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Anyone who knew the word slattern was worth cultivating as a friend.
β
β
Alan Bradley (The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (Flavia de Luce, #1))
β
Whenever I'm with other people, part of me shrinks a little. Only when I am alone can I fully enjoy my own company.
β
β
Alan Bradley (A Red Herring Without Mustard (Flavia de Luce #3))
β
The tragedy of this world is that no one is happy, whether stuck in a time of pain or of joy. The tragedy of this world is that everyone is alone. For a life in the past cannot be shared with the present. Each person who gets stuck in time gets stuck alone.
β
β
Alan Lightman (Einsteinβs Dreams)
β
One is a great deal less anxious if one feels perfectly free to be anxious, and the same may be said of guilt.
β
β
Alan W. Watts (Psychotherapy East and West)
β
The tragedy is not that things are broken. The tragedy is that things are not mended again.
β
β
Alan Paton (Cry, the Beloved Country)
β
Jesus Christ knew he was God. So wake up and find out eventually who you really are. In our culture, of course, theyβll say youβre crazy and youβre blasphemous, and theyβll either put you in jail or in a nut house (which is pretty much the same thing). However if you wake up in India and tell your friends and relations, βMy goodness, Iβve just discovered that Iβm God,β theyβll laugh and say, βOh, congratulations, at last you found out.
β
β
Alan W. Watts (The Essential Alan Watts)
β
In an era of stress and anxiety, when the present seems unstable and the future unlikely, the natural response is to retreat and withdraw from reality, taking recourse either in fantasies of the future or in modified visions of a half-imagined past.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
But what I hope most of all is that you understand what I mean when I tell you that even though I do not know you, and even though I may never meet you, laugh with you, cry with you, or kiss you. I love you. With all my heart, I love you.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Evey Hammond: Who are you?
V: Who? Who is but the form following the function of what and what I am is a man in a mask.
Evey Hammond: Well I can see that.
V: Of course you can. I'm not questioning your powers of observation I'm merely remarking upon the paradox of asking a masked man who he is
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Tomorrow and plans for tomorrow can have no significance at all unless you are in full contact with the reality of the present, since it is in the present and only in the present that you live. There is no other reality than present reality, so that, even if one were to live for endless ages, to live for the future would be to miss the point everlastingly.
β
β
Alan W. Watts (The Wisdom of Insecurity: A Message for an Age of Anxiety)
β
If you say that getting the money is the most important thing, you'll spend your life completely wasting your time. You'll be doing things you don't like doing in order to go on living, that is to go on doing thing you don't like doing, which is stupid.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
Those who love you are not fooled by mistakes you have made or dark images you hold about yourself. They remember your beauty when you feel ugly; your wholeness when you are broken; your innocence when you feel guilty; and your purpose when you are confused.
β
β
Alan Cohen
β
What we have forgotten is that thoughts and words are conventions, and that it is fatal to take conventions too seriously. A convention is a social convenience, as, for example, money ... but it is absurd to take money too seriously, to confuse it with real wealth ... In somewhat the same way, thoughts, ideas and words are "coins" for real things.
β
β
Alan W. Watts (The Wisdom of Insecurity: A Message for an Age of Anxiety)
β
Stood in firelight, sweltering. Bloodstain on chest like map of violent new continent. Felt cleansed. Felt dark planet turn under my feet and knew what cats know that makes them scream like babies in night.
Looked at sky through smoke heavy with human fat and God was not there. The cold, suffocating dark goes on forever and we are alone. Live our lives, lacking anything better to do. Devise reason later. Born from oblivion; bear children, hell-bound as ourselves, go into oblivion. There is nothing else.
Existence is random. Has no pattern save what we imagine after staring at it for too long. No meaning save what we choose to impose. This rudderless world is not shaped by vague metaphysical forces. It is not God who kills the children. Not fate that butchers them or destiny that feeds them to the dogs. Itβs us. Only us. Streets stank of fire. The void breathed hard on my heart, turning its illusions to ice, shattering them. Was reborn then, free to scrawl own design on this morally blank world.
Was Rorschach.
Does that answer your Questions, Doctor?
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
To remain stable is to refrain from trying to separate yourself from a pain because you know that you cannot. Running away from fear is fear, fighting pain is pain, trying to be brave is being scared. If the mind is in pain, the mind is pain. The thinker has no other form than his thought. There is no escape.
β
β
Alan W. Watts (The Wisdom of Insecurity: A Message for an Age of Anxiety)
β
We are living in a culture entirely hypnotized by the illusion of time, in which the so-called present moment is felt as nothing but an infintesimal hairline between an all-powerfully causative past and an absorbingly important future. We have no present. Our consciousness is almost completely preoccupied with memory and expectation. We do not realize that there never was, is, nor will be any other experience than present experience. We are therefore out of touch with reality. We confuse the world as talked about, described, and measured with the world which actually is. We are sick with a fascination for the useful tools of names and numbers, of symbols, signs, conceptions and ideas.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
Rorschach's Journal: October 12th, 1985
Dog carcass in alley this morning, tire tread on burst stomach. This city is afraid of me. I have seen its true face.
The streets are extended gutters and the gutters are full of blood and when the drains finally scab over, all the vermin will drown.
The accumulated filth of all their sex and murder will foam up about their waists and all the whores and politicians will look up and shout "Save us!"... and I'll look down and whisper "No.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
Because while the truncheon may be used in lieu of conversation, words will always retain their power. Words offer the means to meaning, and for those who will listen, the enunciation of truth. And the truth is, there is something terribly wrong with this country, isn't there? Cruelty and injustice, intolerance and oppression. And where once you had the freedom to object, to think and speak as you saw fit, you now have censors and systems of surveillance coercing your conformity and soliciting your submission. How did this happen? Who's to blame? Well certainly there are those more responsible than others, and they will be held accountable, but again truth be told, if you're looking for the guilty, you need only look into a mirror. I know why you did it. I know you were afraid. Who wouldn't be? War, terror, disease. There were a myriad of problems which conspired to corrupt your reason and rob you of your common sense.
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)
β
Thermodynamic miracles... events with odds against so astronomical they're effectively impossible, like oxygen spontaneously becoming gold. I long to observe such a thing.
And yet, in each human coupling, a thousand million sperm vie for a single egg. Multiply those odds by countless generations, against the odds of your ancestors being alive; meeting; siring this precise son; that exact daughter... Until your mother loves a man she has every reason to hate, and of that union, of the thousand million children competing for fertilization, it was you, only you, that emerged. To distill so specific a form from that chaos of improbability, like turning air to gold... that is the crowning unlikelihood. The thermodynamic miracle.
But...if me, my birth, if that's a thermodynamic miracle... I mean, you could say that about anybody in the world!.
Yes. Anybody in the world. ..But the world is so full of people, so crowded with these miracles that they become commonplace and we forget... I forget. We gaze continually at the world and it grows dull in our perceptions. Yet seen from the another's vantage point. As if new, it may still take our breath away. Come...dry your eyes. For you are life, rarer than a quark and unpredictable beyond the dreams of Heisenberg; the clay in which the forces that shape all things leave their fingerprints most clearly. Dry your eyes... and let's go home.
β
β
Alan Moore (Watchmen)
β
MEMORY'S SO
TREACHEROUS.
ONE MOMENT YOU'RE LOST IN A
CARNIVAL
OF
DELIGHTS,
WITH POIGNANT CHILDHOOD
AROMAS
, THE FLASHING NEON OF
PUBERTY,
ALL THAT SENTIMENTAL
CANDY-FLOSS
...
THE
NEXT
, IT LEADS YOU SOMEWHERE YOU DON'T WANT TO GO...
...SOMEWHERE
DARK
AND
COLD,
FILLED WITH THE DAMP, AMBIGUOUS SHAPES OF THINKS YOU'D HOPED WERE
FORGOTTEN.
MEMORIES
CAN BE
VILE, REPULSIVE
LITTLE
BRUTES.
LIKE
CHILDREN,
I SUPPOSE.
HAHA.
BUT CAN WE LIVE
WITHOUT
THEM?
MEMORIES
ARE WHAT OUR
REASON
IS BASED UPON. IF WE CAN'T
FACE
THEM, WE DENY REASON ITSELF!
ALGHOUGH, WHY
NOT?
WE AREN'T
CONTRACTUALLY TIED DOWN
TO
RATIONALITY!
THERE
IS
NO
SANITY CLAUSE!
SO WHEN YOU FIND YOURSELF LOCKED ONTO AN UNPLEASANT TRAIN OF THOUGHT, HEADING FOR THE PLACES IN YOUR PAST WHERE THE SCREAMING IS
UNBEARABLE,
REMEMBER THERE'S ALWAYS
MADNESS.
MADNESS
IS THE
EMERGENCY EXIT...
YOU CAN JUST STEP
OUTSIDE,
AND CLOSE THE DOOR ON ALL THOSE DREADFUL THINGS THAT HAPPENED. YOU CAN LOCK THEM
AWAY...
FOREVER.
β
β
Alan Moore (Batman: The Killing Joke)
β
Let's suppose that you were able every night to dream any dream that you wanted to dream. And that you could, for example, have the power within one night to dream 75 years of time. Or any length of time you wanted to have. And you would, naturally as you began on this adventure of dreams, you would fulfill all your wishes. You would have every kind of pleasure you could conceive. And after several nights of 75 years of total pleasure each, you would say "Well, that was pretty great." But now let's have a surprise. Let's have a dream which isn't under control. Where something is gonna happen to me that I don't know what it's going to be. And you would dig that and come out of that and say "Wow, that was a close shave, wasn't it?" And then you would get more and more adventurous, and you would make further and further out gambles as to what you would dream. And finally, you would dream ... where you are now. You would dream the dream of living the life that you are actually living today.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
It's like you took a bottle of ink and you threw it at a wall. Smash! And all that ink spread. And in the middle, it's dense, isn't it? And as it gets out on the edge, the little droplets get finer and finer and make more complicated patterns, see? So in the same way, there was a big bang at the beginning of things and it spread. And you and I, sitting here in this room, as complicated human beings, are way, way out on the fringe of that bang. We are the complicated little patterns on the end of it. Very interesting. But so we define ourselves as being only that. If you think that you are only inside your skin, you define yourself as one very complicated little curlique, way out on the edge of that explosion. Way out in space, and way out in time. Billions of years ago, you were a big bang, but now you're a complicated human being. And then we cut ourselves off, and don't feel that we're still the big bang. But you are. Depends how you define yourself. You are actually--if this is the way things started, if there was a big bang in the beginning-- you're not something that's a result of the big bang. You're not something that is a sort of puppet on the end of the process. You are still the process. You are the big bang, the original force of the universe, coming on as whoever you are. When I meet you, I see not just what you define yourself as--Mr so-and- so, Ms so-and-so, Mrs so-and-so--I see every one of you as the primordial energy of the universe coming on at me in this particular way. I know I'm that, too. But we've learned to define ourselves as separate from it.
β
β
Alan W. Watts
β
I know there's no way I can convince you this is not one of their tricks, but I don't care, I am me. My name is Valerie, I don't think I'll live much longer and I wanted to tell someone about my life. This is the only autobiography ill ever write, and god, I'm writing it on toilet paper. I was born in Nottingham in 1985, I don't remember much of those early years, but I do remember the rain. My grandmother owned a farm in Tuttlebrook, and she use to tell me that god was in the rain. I passed my 11th lesson into girl's grammar; it was at school that I met my first girlfriend, her name was Sara. It was her wrists. They were beautiful. I thought we would love each other forever. I remember our teacher telling us that is was an adolescent phase people outgrew. Sara did, I didn't. In 2002 I fell in love with a girl named Christina. That year I came out to my parents. I couldn't have done it without Chris holding my hand. My father wouldn't look at me, he told me to go and never come back. My mother said nothing. But I had only told them the truth, was that so selfish? Our integrity sells for so little, but it is all we really have. It is the very last inch of us, but within that inch, we are free. I'd always known what I wanted to do with my life, and in 2015 I starred in my first film, "The Salt Flats". It was the most important role of my life, not because of my career, but because that was how I met Ruth. The first time we kissed, I knew I never wanted to kiss any other lips but hers again. We moved to a small flat in London together. She grew Scarlet Carsons for me in our window box, and our place always smelled of roses. Those were there best years of my life. But America's war grew worse, and worse. And eventually came to London. After that there were no roses anymore. Not for anyone. I remember how the meaning of words began to change. How unfamiliar words like collateral and rendition became frightening. While things like Norse Fire and The Articles of Allegiance became powerful, I remember how different became dangerous. I still don't understand it, why they hate us so much. They took Ruth while she was out buying food. I've never cried so hard in my life. It wasn't long till they came for me.It seems strange that my life should end in such a terrible place, but for three years, I had roses, and apologized to no one. I shall die here. Every inch of me shall perish. Every inch, but one. An Inch, it is small and it is fragile, but it is the only thing the world worth having. We must never lose it or give it away. We must never let them take it from us. I hope that whoever you are, you escape this place. I hope that the world turns and that things get better. But what I hope most of all is that you understand what I mean when I tell you that even though I do not know you, and even though I may never meet you, laugh with you, cry with you, or kiss you. I love you. With all my heart, I love you. -Valerie
β
β
Alan Moore (V for Vendetta)