Blankets Thompson Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Blankets Thompson. Here they are! All 31 of them:

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How satisfying it is to leave a mark on a blank surface. To make a map of my movement - no matter how temporary.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Maybe I'm sad about wanting you. I'm not too comfortable with wanting someone.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Even a mistake is better than nothing.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Shame is always easier to handle if you have someone to share it with.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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On my first visit to the public library, I was like a kid at a candy store where all the candy was free. I gorged myself until my tummy ached.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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I wanted a heaven. And I grew up striving for that world-- an eternal world- that would wash away my temporary misery.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Sometimes, upon waking, the residual dream can be more appealing that reality, and one is reluctant to give it up. For a while, you feel like a ghost -- Not fully materialized, and unable to manipulate your surroundings. Or else, it is the dream that haunts you. You wait with the promise of the next dream.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Pressed against her I can hear eternity -- hollow, lonely spaces and currents that churn ceaselessly, and the fallen snow welcomes the falling snow with a whispered "Hush".
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Which is scarier-- lust or temptation?
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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For what matters if I gain the whole world, but lose my soul?
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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At night, lying on your back and staring at the falling snow, it's easy to imagine oneself soaring through the stars.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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You know, sometimes you look at me with longing... ... even though I'm here with you.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Her lips tarried at mine. Baiting each other with the warmth of our breath, barely grazing, detouring, then connecting.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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I was grateful for cereal --- the only food that my tummy, riddled by pangs of infatuation, could handle.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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And that's my comfort -- that someone else was there and experienced the same thing. How else could I know it was REAL and not merely a dream?
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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We experience a discomfort that may be foreign to others, but that pain opens up a world of beauty. Wouldn't you think?
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Something about being rejected at Church Camp felt so much more awful than being rejected at school.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Except heaven is a hope , and eden is a memory .
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Underwater, we're drowning victims, struggling over and under each others' bodies. But above, we bob with the tide,undercurrents pulling us just far enough apart ,so that we're drifting parallel but not together.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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I still believe in God; the teachings of Jesus even, but the rest of Christianity... its Bible, its churches, its dogma-- only sets up boundaries between people and cultures. It denies the beauty of being HUMAN, and it ignores all these GAPS that need to be filled in by the individual.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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And slowly the snow began to melt. First, doing a number on children's constructions; Then retreating to the foundations of barns and other buildings. Mangy grass poked through the receding snow. Patches of white were swallowed up in the till of the fields. New shapes emerged. Areas of the forest became INACCESSIBLE now that the snow no longer weighed down the weeds and brier. ...Nothing fits together anymore.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Being Southern means carrying a responsibility to shake off the comforting blanket of myth and see ourselves clearly. I was bringing a child into this world, and into our long history of trying to do the right think while benefiting mightily from the wrong thing, and I wanted her to see it clearly without the nostalgia that so often softens my anger and desire to tear it down and build a new world in its place.
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Wright Thompson (Pappyland: A Story of Family, Fine Bourbon, and the Things That Last)
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When you are lost or looking for someone suspected lost, the CROWDS of people form a threatening undertow undermining your every effort.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Being Southern means carrying a responsibility to shake off the comforting blanket of myth and see ourselves clearly.
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Wright Thompson (Pappyland: A Story of Family, Fine Bourbon, and the Things That Last)
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Como Γ© bom deixar uma marca na superfΓ­cie branca. Fazer um mapa com meus passos mesmo que seja temporΓ‘rio.
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Craig Thompson (Blankets)
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Samuel is going to get you a blanket," I told him firmly. "And a pillow. You are going to sleep for the day in my closet. Dead people don't get to stay in my bedroom.
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Patricia Briggs (Blood Bound (Mercy Thompson, #2))
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I feel successful 3–4 days a month. The other days I feel like I’m barely accomplishing the minimum or that I’m a loser. I have imposter syndrome so even when I get compliments they are difficult to take and I just feel like I’m a bigger fraud than before. I feel the worst when I get so paralyzed by fear that I end up huddled in bed and fall further and further behind. To make myself feel more successful I spend real time with my daughter every day, even if it’s just huddling under a blanket and watching Doctor Who reruns on TV. I also try to remind myself that people like Dorothy Parker and Hunter S. Thompson struggled as well, and that this struggle might make me stronger, if it doesn’t first destroy me.
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Jenny Lawson (Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things)
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The rhythm of my body, held within the blanket of the tree canopy, matches the music of the sparrow and the babble of the creek as all the mourning and madness turns into sweat and sunlight, and Earth moves under me and around me and within me.
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J.M. Thompson (Running Is a Kind of Dreaming: A Memoir)
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...the letters begin to cross vast spaces in slow sailing ships and everything becomes still more protracted and verbose, and there seems no end to the space and the leisure of those early nineteenth century days, and faiths are lost and the life of Hedley Vicars revives them; aunts catch cold but recover; cousins marry; there is the Irish famine and the Indian Mutiny, and both sisters remain, to their great, but silent grief, for in those days there were things that women hid like pearls in their breasts, without children to come after them. Louisa, dumped down in Ireland with Lord Waterford at the hunt all day, was often very lonely; but she stuck to her post, visited the poor, spoke words of comfort (β€˜I am sorry indeed to hear of Anthony Thompson's loss of mind, or rather of memory; if, however, he can understand sufficiently to trust solely in our Saviour, he has enough’) and sketched and sketched. Thousands of notebooks were filled with pen and ink drawings of an evening, and then the carpenter stretched sheets for her and she designed frescoes for schoolrooms, had live sheep into her bedroom, draped gamekeepers in blankets, painted Holy Families in abundance, until the great Watts exclaimed that here was Titian's peer and Raphael's master! At that Lady Waterford laughed (she had a generous, benignant sense of humour); and said that she was nothing but a sketcher; had scarcely had a lesson in her lifeβ€”witness her angel's wings, scandalously unfinished. Moreover, there was her father's house for ever falling into the sea; she must shore it up; must entertain her friends; must fill her days with all sorts of charities, till her Lord came home from hunting, and then, at midnight often, she would sketch him with his knightly face half hidden in a bowl of soup, sitting with her notebook under a lamp beside him. Off he would ride again, stately as a crusader, to hunt the fox, and she would wave to him and think, each time, what if this should be the last? And so it was one morning. His horse stumbled. He was killed. She knew it before they told her, and never could Sir John Leslie forget, when he ran down-stairs the day they buried him, the beauty of the great lady standing by the window to see the hearse depart, nor, when he came back again, how the curtain, heavy, Mid-Victorian, plush perhaps, was all crushed together where she had grasped it in her agony.
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Virginia Woolf
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A box of dominoes, a deck of cards, those were under the folded blankets. There are a lot of paperbacks on the shelves in the bedrooms, detective novels mostly, recreational reading. Beside them are the technical books on trees and the other reference books, Edible Plants and Shoots, Tying the Dry Fly, The Common Mushrooms, Log Cabin Construction, A Field Guide to the Birds, Exploring Your Camera, he believed that with the proper guidebooks you could do everything yourself; and his cache of serious books: the King James Bible which he said he enjoyed for its literary qualities, a complete Robert Burns, Boswell’s Life, Thompson’s Seasons, selections from Goldsmith and Cowper. He admired what he called the eighteenth-century rationalists: he thought of them as men who had avoided the corruptions of the Industrial Revolution and learned the secret of the golden mean, the balanced life, he was sure they all practiced organic farming. It astounded me to discover much later, in fact my husband told me, that Burns was an alcoholic, Cowper a madman, Dr. Johnson a manic-depressive and Goldsmith a pauper. There was something wrong with Thompson also; β€œescapist” was the term he used. After that I liked them better, they weren’t paragons any more.
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Margaret Atwood (Surfacing)
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Lucia's abuela chortled, and her mother gave him a playful smack on the arm. But he could see both were pleased. They flanked him as if to escort him to the table. But before they could herd him in that direction, he politely asked permission to give Sanchia the present he'd brought. Identical curious looks sprang into each of the women's eyes, and they stepped back, but crowded behind him to watch the show. Pepe wove through the press of people to kneel before Sanchia and held out the dolly, wrapped in the colorful knitted blanket. Since receiving it, he hadn't peeled back the covering to see Senora Thompson's handiwork, and he was almost as curious as the child. With one finger, the girl traced a line of yellow yarn knitted into the blanket, as if she'd never seen anything so sunny. She looked up at her sister for permission to open the present. At Lucia's nod and encouraging smile, she slowly unwrapped the bundle. The baby lay in splendor, wearing a pink gown and a matching cap and booties. Wonder brightened the little girl's thin, solemn face. She whispered in Lucia's ear, too softly for Pepe to hear. But Lucia's gentle, "Si Sanchia" made her grab the doll to her chest and rock her back and forth.
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Debra Holland (Montana Sky Christmas (Montana Sky, #3.1))