β
There is an ocean of silence between us⦠and I am drowning in it.
β
β
Ranata Suzuki
β
Her death hit in waves. Not a flood, but water lapping steadily at her ankles. You could drown in two inches of water. Maybe grief was the same.
β
β
Brit Bennett (The Vanishing Half)
β
As long as I kept moving, my grief streamed out behind me like a swimmer's long hair in water. I knew the weight was there but it didn't touch me. Only when I stopped did the slick, dark stuff of it come floating around my face, catching my arms and throat till I began to drown. So I just didn't stop.
β
β
Barbara Kingsolver (The Poisonwood Bible)
β
I thought that it was more likely the opposite. I must have shut grief out. Found it in books. Cried over fiction instead of the truth. The truth was unconfined, unadorned. There was no poetic language to it, no yellow butterflies, no epic floods. There wasn't a town trapped underwater or generations of men with the same name destined to make the same mistakes. The truth was vast enough to drown in.
β
β
Nina LaCour (We Are Okay)
β
Grief is an ocean, and guilt the undertow that pulls me beneath the waves and drowns me.
β
β
Shaun David Hutchinson (We Are the Ants)
β
The time when there is nothing at all in your soul except a cry for help may be just that time when God can't give it: you are like the drowning man who can't be helped because he clutches and grabs. Perhaps your own reiterated cries deafen you to the voice you hoped to hear.
β
β
C.S. Lewis (A Grief Observed)
β
For the most part, you don't hold the people you love in your heart because they rescued you from drowning or pulled you from a burning house. Mostly you hold them in your heart because they save you, in a million quiet and perfect ways, from being alone.
β
β
Jeff Zentner (Goodbye Days)
β
If he didnβt love so deeply, he couldnβt grieve so deeply. But heβs drowning in it.
β
β
Dee Henderson (The Protector (O'Malley, #4))
β
I'd always written how grief was hollow. How it was a vast cavern of nothing.
But I was wrong.
Grief was the exact opposite. It was full and heavy and drowning because it wasn't the absence of everything you lost - it was the combination of it all, your love, your happiness, your bittersweets, wound tight like a knotted ball of yarn.
- Florence Day
β
β
Ashley Poston (The Dead Romantics)
β
I haven't cried. But sometimes I feel as if my veins are leaking, as if my body is overwhelmed, as if I'm drowning from the inside.
β
β
Sarah Winman (Tin Man)
β
You could drown in two inches of water. Maybe grief was the same.
β
β
Brit Bennett (The Vanishing Half)
β
Sad is like a big ocean, and you canβt breathe deep down. You can float on it, you can swim a little, but be careful. Grief is drowning. Grief is deep water.
β
β
Christopher Ruocchio (Howling Dark (Sun Eater #2))
β
Crying all the time had made her more beautiful. Grief will do that sometimes. Not for me. Loretta had left months ago and I still looked like hell.
β
β
Junot DΓaz (Drown)
β
A Thirsty Fish
I don't get tired of you. Don't grow weary
of being compassionate toward me!
All this thirst equipment
must surely be tired of me,
the waterjar, the water carrier.
I have a thirsty fish in me
that can never find enough
of what it's thirsty for!
Show me the way to the ocean!
Break these half-measures,
these small containers.
All this fantasy
and grief.
Let my house be drowned in the wave
that rose last night in the courtyard
hidden in the center of my chest.
Joseph fell like the moon into my well.
The harvest I expected was washed away.
But no matter.
A fire has risen above my tombstone hat.
I don't want learning, or dignity,
or respectability.
I want this music and this dawn
and the warmth of your cheek against mine.
The grief-armies assemble,
but I'm not going with them.
This is how it always is
when I finish a poem.
A great silence comes over me,
and I wonder why I ever thought
to use language.
β
β
Jalal ad-Din Muhammad ar-Rumi
β
Grief is weird. It seems to come in these waves out of nowhere. One minute I'm standing in the ocean, fine. The next minute I'm drowning.
β
β
Jeff Zentner (Goodbye Days)
β
But grief still has to be worked through. It is like walking through water. Sometimes there are little waves lapping about my feet. Sometimes there is an enormous breaker that knocks me down. Sometimes there is a sudden and fierce squall. But I know that many waters cannot quench love, neither can the floods drown it.
β
β
Madeleine L'Engle (Two-Part Invention: The Story of a Marriage (Crosswicks Journals, #4))
β
It was when I discovered that there are two kinds of death. There is ceasing to exist, usually accompanied by a funeral and loved ones in mourning. And then there is emotional death born out of necessity and measured solely by the absence of grief it causes: the turning off the lights of oneself in order to shut down the feelings of being alive.
β
β
Kerry Kletter (The First Time She Drowned)
β
The only thing worse than drowning in grief is sharing a lifeboat with other drowning people.
β
β
Courtney Cole (Nocte (The Nocte Trilogy, #1))
β
You keep storing up all that anger and grief. Eventually it spills over. Or you drown in it.
β
β
Leigh Bardugo (Ruin and Rising (The Shadow and Bone Trilogy, #3))
β
Little Words
When you are gone, there is nor bloom nor leaf,
Nor singing sea at night, nor silver birds;
And I can only stare, and shape my grief
In little words.
I cannot conjure loveliness, to drown
The bitter woe that racks my cords apart.
The weary pen that sets my sorrow down
Feeds at my heart.
There is no mercy in the shifting year,
No beauty wraps me tenderly about.
I turn to little words- so you, my dear,
Can spell them out.
β
β
Dorothy Parker (The Portable Dorothy Parker)
β
The only thing worse than drowning in grief is sharing a lifeboat with other drowning people.Β Besides, if anyone needs a grief group, itβs him.
β
β
Courtney Cole (Nocte (The Nocte Trilogy, #1))
β
How do you act like you've lost your soul?" Akiva asked. He meant it as a lighthearted question about a children's game, but when he heard himself say the words, he thought, Who knows better than I?
You betray everything you believe in. You drown your grief in vengeance. You kill and keep killing until there's no one left.
β
β
Laini Taylor (Dreams of Gods & Monsters (Daughter of Smoke & Bone, #3))
β
What can I tell you
about the alchemy of twins?
Twins are
two bodies that dance
to each otherβs joy.
Two minds that drown
in each otherβs despair.
Two spirits that fly
with each otherβs love.
Twins are
two separate beings
conjoined at the heart!
β
β
Kamand Kojouri
β
Oh dire, dreadful death, you drag your heels.
Why dawdle and draw back? You drown my heart.
β
β
Simon Armitage (The Death of King Arthur: A New Verse Translation)
β
We were familiar with the line that separates grief from madness, and we know that sometimes the only way to stay on the right side of it is to scream.
β
β
Carsten Jensen (We, the Drowned)
β
A song of despair
The memory of you emerges from the night around me.
The river mingles its stubborn lament with the sea.
Deserted like the dwarves at dawn.
It is the hour of departure, oh deserted one!
Cold flower heads are raining over my heart.
Oh pit of debris, fierce cave of the shipwrecked.
In you the wars and the flights accumulated.
From you the wings of the song birds rose.
You swallowed everything, like distance.
Like the sea, like time. In you everything sank!
It was the happy hour of assault and the kiss.
The hour of the spell that blazed like a lighthouse.
Pilot's dread, fury of blind driver,
turbulent drunkenness of love, in you everything sank!
In the childhood of mist my soul, winged and wounded.
Lost discoverer, in you everything sank!
You girdled sorrow, you clung to desire,
sadness stunned you, in you everything sank!
I made the wall of shadow draw back,
beyond desire and act, I walked on.
Oh flesh, my own flesh, woman whom I loved and lost,
I summon you in the moist hour, I raise my song to you.
Like a jar you housed infinite tenderness.
and the infinite oblivion shattered you like a jar.
There was the black solitude of the islands,
and there, woman of love, your arms took me in.
There was thirst and hunger, and you were the fruit.
There were grief and ruins, and you were the miracle.
Ah woman, I do not know how you could contain me
in the earth of your soul, in the cross of your arms!
How terrible and brief my desire was to you!
How difficult and drunken, how tensed and avid.
Cemetery of kisses, there is still fire in your tombs,
still the fruited boughs burn, pecked at by birds.
Oh the bitten mouth, oh the kissed limbs,
oh the hungering teeth, oh the entwined bodies.
Oh the mad coupling of hope and force
in which we merged and despaired.
And the tenderness, light as water and as flour.
And the word scarcely begun on the lips.
This was my destiny and in it was my voyage of my longing,
and in it my longing fell, in you everything sank!
Oh pit of debris, everything fell into you,
what sorrow did you not express, in what sorrow are you not drowned!
From billow to billow you still called and sang.
Standing like a sailor in the prow of a vessel.
You still flowered in songs, you still brike the currents.
Oh pit of debris, open and bitter well.
Pale blind diver, luckless slinger,
lost discoverer, in you everything sank!
It is the hour of departure, the hard cold hour
which the night fastens to all the timetables.
The rustling belt of the sea girdles the shore.
Cold stars heave up, black birds migrate.
Deserted like the wharves at dawn.
Only tremulous shadow twists in my hands.
Oh farther than everything. Oh farther than everything.
It is the hour of departure. Oh abandoned one!
β
β
Pablo Neruda
β
The grief in her green eyes slips then hardens and, for an instant, Pendleton sees the woman she has become and has no right being, not at sixteen.
β
β
Ilsa J. Bick (Drowning Instinct)
β
The train blows through town
delivering reality,
slapping my face and screaming,
βYou are aloneβ
Rose colored memories drown,
taking their last breath.
β
β
Kellie Elmore (Magic in the Backyard)
β
Become so drunk on life and love that it blinds you to the hate threatening to drown you. Chew on grief for breakfast, devour aches for lunch, inhale lifeβs acid, let it burn the costume he has forced upon you.
β
β
Tiffany D. Jackson (The Weight of Blood)
β
Grief is a monster.
β
β
Jennifer McMahon (The Drowning Kind)
β
And that was the worst thing about this grief β not just knowing that she was gone, but knowing that eventually new memories and experiences would layer on top of them, making the distance between us ever wider.
β
β
Andrea Stewart (The Bone Shard Daughter (The Drowning Empire, #1))
β
GRIEF IS A sea made of your own tears. Salty swells cover the dark depths you must swim at your own pace. It takes time to build stamina. Some days, my arms sliced through the water, and I felt things would be okay, the shore wasnβt so far off. Then one memory, one moment would nearly drown me, and Iβd be back to the beginning, fighting to stay above the waves, exhausted, sinking in my own sorrow.
β
β
Janet Skeslien Charles (The Paris Library)
β
Closing my eyes, I then focused in on the lyrics. I couldn't help thinking how much the song meant to me because of Maddie. She had caught me when I'd fallen and saved me from the epic storm of grief just like the lyrics said. I wasn't drowning in sadness anymore. Instead I was drowning in her-her smile, her beauty, her giving heart and beautiful spirit.
β
β
Katie Ashley (Don't Hate the Player...Hate the Game)
β
There is a point when the anguished soul finally despairs. A moment in life when the heart, the will, even the spirit crumbles. Some say that after much grief and drowning in tears, it is possible to pick up the pieces and carefully repair what was shattered.
I say nay.
For the chains of despair have no key, and the soul destroyed by that monster can never hope to be unaffected. There are things done that cannot be undone.
β
β
Richelle E. Goodrich (Smile Anyway: Quotes, Verse, and Grumblings for Every Day of the Year)
β
It is possible too that I was experiencing something known as "anticipatory grief," the mourning that occurs before a certain loss. Anticipatory. Expectatory. Trepidatory. This grief had a dampness. It did not drench or drown me, but it hung in the air like a pallid cloud, thinning but never entirely vanishing. It followed me wherever I went and gradually I grew used to looking at the world through it.
β
β
Kyo Maclear (Birds Art Life: A Year of Observation)
β
It feels weird, being out in the real world again. Around people just living their lives like normal. Their presence is oppressive. The very fact that the world is going on as usual, like nothing ever happened, makes me want to scream. I know it's irrational to expect everything to grind to a halt because of June, but still. A wave of anxiety builds in my chest, my head pounding so loud it drowns out the noise of people talking and tapping away on their laptops.
β
β
Hannah Harrington (Saving June)
β
Can you drown in grief? She turned away sharply, angry with her own frailty. She had no time for the luxury of self-pity.
β
β
George R.R. Martin (A Clash of Kings (A Song of Ice and Fire, #2))
β
There's some ill planet reigns:
I must be patient till the heavens look
With an aspect more favourable. Good my lords,
I am not prone to weeping, as our sex
Commonly are; the want of which vain dew
Perchance shall dry your pities: but I have
That honourable grief lodged here which burns
Worse than tears drown: beseech you all, my lords,
With thoughts so qualified as your charities
Shall best instruct you, measure me; and so
The king's will be perform'd!
β
β
William Shakespeare (The Winter's Tale)
β
she knew what such grief was like and she had built her own defenses high over the years. But if you raised them too much, they became a prison and in the end you drowned with no one to hear you scream.
β
β
Elizabeth Chadwick (The Winter Crown (Eleanor of Aquitaine, #2))
β
You're back where you swore yourself you wouldn't be
The familiar shackles you can't tell from your own skin
Your head's under water when you learned to swim
On a road to hell, congratulations, you're free...
β
β
Sanhita Baruah
β
Surviving makes other peopleβs tears unbearable. You might drown in them.
β
β
Marceline Loridan-Ivens (But You Did Not Come Back)
β
I'd think of these images -
people dying, a city drowning -
instead of thinking about Rosemary, dying, drowning.
β
β
E. Lockhart (Family of Liars)
β
There is nothing more painful than the untimely death of someone young and dear to the heart. The harrowing grief surges from a bottomless well of sorrow, drowning the mourner in a torrent of agonizing pain; an exquisite pain that continues to afflict the mourner with heartache and loneliness long after the deceased is buried and gone.
β
β
Jocelyn Murray (Khu: A Tale of Ancient Egypt)
β
The Detective was different. Not that he wasn't a good man; Willie had heard enough about him to understand that he was the kind who didn't like to turn away from another's pain, the kind who couldn't put a pillow over his ears to drown out the cries of strangers. Those scars he had were badges of courage, and Willie knew that there were others hidden beneath his clothes, and still more deep inside, right beneath the skin and down to the soul. No, it was just that whatever goodness was there coexisted with rage and grief and loss.
β
β
John Connolly (The Reapers (Charlie Parker, #7))
β
How do you say what's in your heart if your heart is something you haven't known for years? How do you give yourself completely when all you've done is bury yourself in grief? How do you come back from the dar when it's all you can remember?
β
β
T.J. Klune (Into This River I Drown)
β
In the bar, the jukebox comes on. Molley must be trying to drown out the sounds of raised voices. I move toward her, unable to resist; her eyes are wet, her face flushed, and I can finally look at her, want her, let myself touch her without grief turning everything to ashes in my mouth.
β
β
Amie Kaufman (This Shattered World (Starbound, #2))
β
The tap of grief never turns off completely. It allows a personβs sorrow to slowly drip inside them until they are so unbearably full of sadness, they have no choice but to let it flow freely and pour out. Drowning every other thought and feeling.
β
β
Alice Feeney (Daisy Darker)
β
...how many of the phrases that came to mind when thinking about his own life, were somehow sea-related. Her interest had ebbed. They were both drowning in their sorrow. He had sunk lower than ever before. The vocabulary of the ocean seemed tailored to loss.
β
β
Meg Wolitzer (Sleepwalking)
β
Her laugh,' she said finally 'She snorted when she laughed.' The corner of my mouth inched up but a new heaviness settled across my chest. 'I love when people do that,' I admitted. 'My best friend does it. I always feel like she's drowning in life. In a good way. Like it's rushing up her nose, you know?
β
β
Emily Henry (Beach Read)
β
Intuition is a wonderful gift but it can be both a blessing and a curse. If you can easily tune in to the grief of another, it is very easy to lose your way if you have not yet resolved your own present or past trauma and grief. If you have not healed from your own grief and you turn around and give all you have to give, you will find yourself drowning. Soon there will be nothing left of you.
β
β
Kate McGahan (Only Gone From Your Sight: Jack McAfghan's Little Therapy Guide to Pet Loss and Grief (Jack McAfghan Pet Loss Series Book 4))
β
Guilt is easier to drown in than any sorrow. pg. 245
β
β
Erica Bauermeister (No Two Persons)
β
Anger, at least, was a balm to the rawness of her grief. But she was too tired to sharpen it into a blade, so she wound it around herself like amor
β
β
Allison Saft (A Dark and Drowning Tide)
β
Wanna know what a bullet feels like, Warren? A real one? Itβs not like in the comicsβ¦I think you need to. Feel itβ¦Itβs not going to make a neat little hole. First - itβll obliterate your internal organs. Your lung will collapse, feels like drowningβ¦When it finally hits your spine, itβll blow your central nervous system-β¦Iβm talking. The pain will be unbearable, but you wonβt be able to moveβ¦ A bullet usually travels faster than this, of course. But the dying? It seems like it takes forever. Something, isnβt it? One tiny piece of metal destroys everything. It ripped her insides outβ¦ It took her light away. From me. From the worldβ¦ And now the one person who should be here is gone - and a waste like you gets to live. A tiny piece of metal. Can you feel it now?
β
β
Joss Whedon
β
There are places I cannot visit. Places of unbearable sadness, grief, mourning. They say places are made by people. I say places are defined by the memories they conjureβthe lunge of a curse, a shared and shattered history, a loved one drowned and lost in the ocean of forgetting.
β
β
Psyche Roxas-Mendoza
β
Everyone grieves differently. No one handles the loss of a loved one the same. Some put on a brave face for others, keeping everything internal. Others let it all out at once and shatter, only to pick up the pieces just as quickly as they came apart. Still others don't grieve at all, implying they are incapable of emotion.
Then there are the ones like me, where grief is a badge we wear, where it's hard to let go because we don't want to. We probably wouldn't know how even is we wanted to. There's unanswered questions, unresolved feelings. Tere is anger that this person could even conceive of leaving us behind. We are the furious ones, the ones that scream at the injustice and the pain. We are the ones who obsess and slowly lose rational thought, knowing it is happening but unable to find a way to care. We are the ones who drown.
β
β
T.J. Klune (Into This River I Drown)
β
I wasn't a stranger to grieving, to the way it drowned you but didn't kill you - only kept you submerged for so long you forgot what air and sunshine even felt like. I knew that grief set its own timeline, and that the only way out was through.
β
β
Katherine Center (What You Wish For)
β
Let Love clasp Grief lest both be drownβd, Let darkness keep her raven gloss: Ah, sweeter to be drunk with loss, To dance with death, to beat the ground. βAlfred, Lord Tennyson, βIn Memoriam A.H.H.
β
β
Cassandra Clare (Clockwork Princess (The Infernal Devices, #3))
β
O Lord our God, help us to tear their soldiers to bloody shreds with our shells; help us to cover their smiling fields with the pale forms of their patriot dead; help us to drown the thunder of the guns with the shrieks of their wounded, writhing in pain; help us to lay waste their humble homes with a hurricane of fire; help us to wring the hearts of their unoffending widows with unavailing grief; help us to turn them out roofless with little children to wander unfriended the wastes of their desolated land in rags and hunger and thirst.
β
β
Mark Twain (The War Prayer)
β
O Lord our Father, our young patriots, idols of our hearts, go forth to battle -- be Thou near them! With them -- in spirit -- we also go forth from the sweet peace of our beloved firesides to smite the foe. O Lord our God, help us to tear their soldiers to bloody shreds with our shells; help us to cover their smiling fields with the pale forms of their patriot dead; help us to drown the thunder of the guns with the shrieks of their wounded, writhing in pain; help us to lay waste their humble homes with a hurricane of fire; help us to wring the hearts of their unoffending widows with unavailing grief; help us to turn them out roofless with little children to wander unfriended the wastes of their desolated land in rags and hunger and thirst, sports of the sun flames of summer and the icy winds of winter, broken in spirit, worn with travail, imploring Thee for the refuge of the grave and denied it -- for our sakes who adore Thee, Lord, blast their hopes, blight their lives, protract their bitter pilgrimage, make heavy their steps, water their way with their tears, stain the white snow with the blood of their wounded feet! We ask it, in the spirit of love, of Him Who is the Source of Love, and Who is the ever-faithful refuge and friend of all that are sore beset and seek His aid with humble and contrite hearts. Amen.
β
β
Mark Twain
β
Faith shall save your Soul from Death. Without Faith, Death is a drowning, the end of ends, and what sane man wouldnβ²t fear that? But with Faith, Death is nothing worse than the end of the voyage we call life, and the beginning of an eternal voyage in a company of our Loved Ones, with griefs and woes smoothed out, and under the capacity of our Creator...
β
β
David Mitchell (The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet)
β
Who could blame her for wanting the baby to be alive? His Irene still cried sometimes about young Billy, and it had been twenty years since heβd drowned as a tot. Theyβd had five more kids since then, but it was never far away, the sadness.
β
β
M.L. Stedman (The Light Between Oceans)
β
Her death hit in waves. Not a flood, but water lapping steadily at her ankles. You could drown in two inches of water. Maybe grief was the same. β
β
β
Brit Bennett (The Vanishing Half)
β
grief is like the wake behind a boat. It starts out as a huge wave that follows close behind you and is big enough to swamp and drown you if you suddenly stop moving forward. But if you do keep moving, the big wake will eventually dissipate. And after a long enough time, the waters of your life get calm again, and that is when the memories of those who have left begin to shine as bright and as enduring as the stars above.
β
β
Jimmy Buffett (A Salty Piece of Land)
β
The bastard. How dare he? I was drowning in a fucking river that he was still attempting to save me from, and he was telling me he was going to push me back in and hold me under. My father's death had nearly destroyed me. Cal's death would finish me.
β
β
T.J. Klune (Into This River I Drown)
β
...when the years have all passed, there will gape the uncomfortable and unpredictable dark void of death, and into this I shall at last fall headlong, down and down and down, and the prospect of that fall, that uprooting, that rending apart of body and spirit, that taking off into so blank an unknown, drowns me in mortal fear and mortal grief. After all, life, for all its agonies of despair and loss and guilt, is exciting and beautiful, amusing and artful and endearing, full of liking and of love, at times a poem and a high adventure, at times noble and at times very gay; and whatever (if anything) is to come after it, we shall not have this life again.
β
β
Rose Macaulay (The Towers of Trebizond)
β
You may ask why I allow my face to drown in less and less joy with each passing year and I will say I just woke up one day and I was a still photo in everyone else's home but my own. or I will say I promise that my legs just need another season, and then I will be who you fell in love with again. and then probably just I'm sorry that there was once a tremendous blue sky and then a decade of hard, incessant rain.
β
β
Hanif Abdurraqib (The Crown Ain't Worth Much)
β
I felt like the ocean. I felt like my insides were spread out so far and wide and there were so many things inside of me all at once, and thoughts racing and swimming and I felt like I was drowning in tidal waves of grief.
β
β
Anna Akana (Surviving Suicide)
β
Grief, Cordelia would realize during that night and the next day, was like drowning. Sometimes one would surface from the dark water: a period of brief lucidity and calmness, during which ordinary tasks might be accomplished. During which one's behavior was, presumably, normal, and it was possible to hold a conversation.
The rest of the time, one was pulled deep below the water. There was no lucidity, only panic and terror, only her mind screaming incoherently, only the sensation of dying. Of not being able to breathe.
She would remember the time later as flashes of light in the dark, moments when she surfaced, when the making of memories was possible, if incomplete.
β
β
Cassandra Clare (Chain of Thorns (The Last Hours, #3))
β
This is my story.
Death tried to kill it;
Grief tried to drown it;
Pride tried to erase it;
Pain tried to hide it;
but
Deep saved it.
My story grew words while waiting in Deep and now my words have wings to fly. Lottie Johnson, age 96
β
β
Sandi Morgan Denkers (Waiting in Deep)
β
shows the destructive forces that affect young women. As a girl, Ophelia is happy and free, but with adolescence she loses herself. When she falls in love with Hamlet, she lives only for his approval. She has no inner direction ; rather she struggles to meet the demands of Hamlet and her father. Her value is determined utterly by their approval. Ophelia is torn apart by her efforts to please. When Hamlet spurns her because she is an obedient daughter, she goes mad with grief. Dressed in elegant clothes that weigh her down, she drowns in a stream filled with flowers.
β
β
Mary Pipher (Reviving Ophelia)
β
I'd always written how grief was hallow. How it was a vast cavern of nothing. But I was wrong. Grief was the exact opposite. It was full and heavy and drowning because it wasn't the absence of everything you lost-- it was the culmination of it all, your love , your happiness, your bittersweets, wound tight like a knotted ball of yarn.
β
β
Ashley Poston (The Dead Romantics)
β
Everything hurts. I don't know how to make it stop. It hurts when I breathe. It hurts when I think. I feel like I'm drowning, and it's my fault, and I don't know how to be okay. I don't know if I CAN be okay. I don't know if I should be allowed to be okay.
β
β
Victoria E. Schwab (The Archived (The Archived, #1))
β
He had drowned the boy underground with his own hands, but his twisted mind still had the nerve to feel grief over the loss. How horrifying.
β
β
Otsuichi (Goth)
β
I wait for him to do what everyone else did after my parents died. Spout of some conventional words of sympathy like, I'm so sorry. How awful. You poor thing. Terribly sad...and then run. People always do. Nobody knows what to say after the initial words of supposed comfort. Death and grief make everyone around you vanish because death and grief are intolerable.
β
β
Jessica Park (Left Drowning (Left Drowning, #1))
β
The time when there is nothing at all in your soul except a cry for help may be just the time when God canβt give it: you are like the drowning man who canβt be helped because he clutches and grabs. Perhaps your own reiterated cries deafen you to the voice you hoped to hear.
β
β
C.S. Lewis (A Grief Observed)
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Your bloodline was marinated in rage. There will be pain in carrying this dark secret. A pain you must endure for others and for yourself. This sickly power you hold without hands will eventually burn until you no longer can hide it. You must learn to control it. Or it will control you. But be not a doormat. You can ease the pain by leaving all that you know. Become so drunk on life and love that it blinds you to the hate threatening to drown you. Chew on grief for breakfast, devour aches for lunch, inhale lifeβs acid, let it burn the costume he has forced upon you.
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Tiffany D. Jackson (The Weight of Blood)
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Itβs funny, grief, isnβt it? How you die with them. Whoever you were before has gone. Your ghost walks the earth. You look the same, sound the same, but are not the same. You donβt breathe oxygen the way you did before. You negotiate life under an ocean. Drowning as you do your shopping, drowning as you ride the bus, drowning as you go to work. You canβt live with this, you think. No one could live with this. Itβs unliveable. Then there are moments when your head rises above the water. You find something funny, laugh. A glimpse of your previous self. Until you are submerged once again. Guilty for your brief ability to breathe. Over time the water levels drop. First you tread water; then you swim; then you wade; then you are paddling; until finally you are walking alongside a stream. It flows next to you. Wherever you are, whatever you do, however happy youβre feeling, itβs there.
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Charlotte Levin (If I Can't Have You)
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Let Love clasp Grief lest both be drown'd,
Let darkness keep her raven gloss:
Ah, sweeter to be drunk with loss,
To dance with death, to beat the ground,
Than that the victor Hours should scorn
The long result of love, and boast,
`Behold the man that loved and lost,
But all he was is overworn.
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Alfred Lord Tension
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When my mother died, I thought Iβd drown in sorrow. But my grandmother said something very wise, and Iβve always held it close to my heart. She said that not even the sea is infinite, and neither is grief.
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T. Frohock
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Do not seek anywhere but within for love. Do not build walls preventing love from entering, rather build an aura around you that is penetrable to allow a flow of love to constantly go through you. We are but a mere vessel of love. This vessel is connected to all things. Love is channeled through all these streams and it is constantly flowing. If an attempt is made to contain this love, it will break the dam thus causing an overwhelming amount of grief and sense of drowning. When love is allowed to flow naturally without trying to possess it, it gives one all that is needed. It protects you. It serves you. It guides you. And most of all it loves you. Love is meant to flow. Embrace the flow. It is always going through you. Do not ever doubt it. Love connects us all. The all is love itself, so that includes you. You are never without love. In fact, you ARE love.
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Jason Micheal Ratliff
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My aunt used to say grief was a lot like swimming in the ocean. On the good days, we could float on top with our heads above water, feeling the sunshine on our faces. But on the bad days, the water grew violent, and it was difficult not to get sucked under and drown. The only thing we could do was learn to be stronger swimmers.
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Vi Keeland (Inappropriate)
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I must have shut grief out. Found it in books. Cried over fiction instead of the truth. The truth was unconfined, unadorned. There was no poetic language to it, no yellow butterflies, no epic floods. There wasnβt a town trapped underwater or generations of men with the same name destined to repeat the same mistakes. The truth was vast enough to drown in.
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Nina LaCour (We Are Okay)
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How do I get past it?β she mumbles, not necessarily to him. Hate. Hurt. Guilt. And grief. So much of it that I feel its thickness and its weight, like she is drowning and canβt breathe. βA single step at a time,β the man says, speaking from some profound experience of his own and with deep understanding, making me wonder if all pain might be the same regardless of its origin.
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Suzanne Redfearn (In an Instant)
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In the mornings I awoke with salty crust of tears around my eyes--my grief struggling to surface when I was in my weakest, lost in sleep. But by day I would not allow myself to feel. My misery was muted; it had to be. If I faced it in earnest, I would truly drown.
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Chandra Prasad (On Borrowed Wings)
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They say: 'Come to tea and let us comfort you.' But it's no good. One must be crucified on one's own private cross. I know that V. will not come across the garden from the lodge, & yet I look in that direction for her. I know that she is drowned & yet I listen for her to come in at the door. I know that it is the last page & yet I turn it over. There is no limit to one's stupidity & selfishness.
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Leonard Woolf
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You still miss her?"
"Yes, I still miss her frightfully. It's two years since she died, but I haven't got used to doing without her. I still keep on wanting to tell her things."
"I know the feeling," said Louise. "I miss Mummy like that. It comes and goes. Sometimes I forget about itβand then the tide rises and I'm almost drowned. It happens quite suddenlyβI never know when it's going to happen.
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D.E. Stevenson (Bel Lamington (Bel Lamington #1))
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And that was the worst thing about this grief β not just knowing that she was gone, but knowing that eventually new memories and experiences would layer on top of them, making the distance between us ever wider. The days weβd spent swimming and fishing at the beach, the first time Iβd kissed her, the dreams weβd shared β I was now the only keeper of these memories, and that was the truest sort of loneliness.
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Andrea Stewart (The Bone Shard Daughter (The Drowning Empire, #1))
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At the end of seven hundred and twelve pages of this manuscript,β he had reported, βafter innumerable griefs at being drowned in unfathomable developments and irritating impatience at never being able to rise to the surface β one doesnβt have a single, but not a single clue of what this is about. What is the point of all this? What does it all mean? Where is it all leading? Impossible to know anything about it!
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Alain de Botton (How Proust Can Change Your Life (Picador Classic))
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How is the ocean not enraged,
swellingβ
how is it not furious with grief:
we have drowned it in plastic,
its waves are no longer its own.
How does it survive this,
blistered by our carelessness?
We are drops of the ocean:
why canβt we see this?
βwhen plastic outnumbers fish
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Ashley Asti (The Moon and Her Sisters)
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And then there is emotional death born out of necessity and measured solely by the absence of grief it causes: the turning off the lights of oneself in order to shut down the feelings of being alive. Eventually I just checked out of the world altogether, leaving behind only my body, like a snail abandoning its shell. Sometimes I would catch myself in the mirror, surprised to see someone staring back at me, a stranger whose face I struggled to connect as my own, whose body was visible and intact despite the feeling that I moved through the world as a ghost.
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Kerry Kletter (The First Time She Drowned)
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How do I get past it?β she mumbles, not necessarily to him. Hate. Hurt. Guilt. And grief. So much of it that I feel its thickness and its weight, like she is drowning and canβt breathe. βA single step at a time,β the man says, speaking from some profound experience of his own and with deep understanding, making me wonder if all pain might be the same regardless of its origin. βYouβre still here,β he goes on. βSo thereβs not really a choice. An inch, a foot, not necessarily in the right direction, but onward nonetheless.β My mom shudders a deep breath, looks up at him. βUntil eventually,β he says, βthe present becomes the past, and you are somewhere else altogether, hopefully in a better place than you are today.
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Suzanne Redfearn (In an Instant)
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Touch was absolutely
out of the question. I couldnβt stop sweating. My heart, a butterfly pinned
to a glacier. Empires fell inside my mouth. I touched myself like a pogrom
& broke my sex into a history of inconsequential shames. I wept viciously
inside of my own stomach & had it condemned. From an upside-down bell
I drank silence, subsisted on the memory of someone elseβs hands. Wolves
sang & I did not answer. I forgot their names. Mornings were the worst, then
there were days & evenings. Streetlights & darkened sycamore & suburban
grief so full it made me foolish. I shattered my fist on the Lordβs jaw. Sorrow
sat, licking my wrists & my neck. I slept at its convenience. O, uncelebrated
body. My penis, a lighthouse on the bottom of the ocean, shining shadows
at the undersides of boats. Nobody drowned for so many years. Desperate
for the making of those candy-throated ghosts, I found the rooms between
the violence of comets. I threw myself into anythingβs path. Even the sky
bent around me. How lonely to be something that nothing wants to kill. (So I Locked Myself Inside A Star for Twenty Years)
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Jeremy Radin
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To everyone in the foyer reading the lists, or on the sidewalks waving signs and photos of their families whoβd disappeared, I said over and over again: βEveryone is dead.β If they insisted, showing me family photos, Iβd calmly say: βWere there any children? Not a single child will come back.β I didnβt mince my words, I didnβt try to spare their feelings, I was used to death. Iβd become as hard-hearted as the deportees who saw us arrive at Birkenau without saying a single comforting word. Surviving makes other peopleβs tears unbearable. You might drown in them.
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Marceline Loridan-Ivens (But You Did Not Come Back)
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Strike, with hand of fire, O weird musician, thy harp strung with Apollo's golden hair; fill the vast cathedral aisles with symphonies sweet and dim, deft toucher of the organ keys; blow, bugler, blow, until thy silver notes do touch and kiss the moonlit waves, and charm the lovers wandering 'mid the vine-clad hills. But know, your sweetest strains are discords all, compared with childhood's happy laughβthe laugh that fills the eyes with light and every heart with joy. O rippling river of laughter, thou art the blessed boundary line between the beasts and men; and every wayward wave of thine doth drown some fretful fiend of care. O Laughter, rose-lipped daughter of Joy, there are dimples enough in thy cheeks to catch and hold and glorify all the tears of grief.
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Robert G. Ingersoll (The Liberty Of Man, Woman And Child)
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I suddenly saw how each life's joy and pain were made just exactly right for that life so that they fit that life perfectly like its own skin. And so no other body could possibly get in and try it on for itself because every other body had its own perfect skin too.
And the more you could stand the more you'd be given, so you were always filled right up to your own personal limit where one more drop, which you could count on, would push it over the edge. And so you would somehow have to find the way to contain it too, that one drop too many, and maybe just to see how much you could actually bear. And whether your capacity be a thimbleful or the whole damn ocean, the well of your precious collected humor be it tears today or your life's blood tomorrow will surely drown the fragile flame of your existence given the addition of that inevitable next drop. Unless you grow. Unless you become big enough to still hold it all.
And so like it or not, you would learn what you were given the breath of life to learn. You would learn what you unknowingly came here to learn. And your sorrow and grief and your joys and pleasures too would teach you your lessons in a curriculum devised just precisely for you.
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Joe Henry (Lime Creek)
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He gathered us both up to him, threw back his head, and howled. His jaws stretched wide, his face turned up to the sky, and the ridges of muscle in his neck stood out. He made no sound. Yet the grief that poured through him and up to the sky soaked me and choked me. I drowned in his sorrow. I put my hands against his chest and tried to lever away from him, but could not. From impossibly far away, I felt my sister. She battered at him, demanding to know what was wrong. There were others, ones I had never met, shouting into his mind, offering to send soldiers, to lend strength, to do anything for him that could possibly be done. But he could not even verbalize his pain.
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Robin Hobb (Fool's Assassin (The Fitz and the Fool, #1))
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Things have changed, oh yes. Make no mistake about that. But thatβs the funny thing about grief and anger combined; even while buried in newfound happiness, it claws and it whispers. It begs. It howls. It screams. It doesnβt let go. And it demands retribution.
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T.J. Klune (Into This River I Drown)
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High expectations I have. In hardness I labor that, fuller joy at the top I may partake. Nevertheless, in vain I toil. And then, friends'and people's reproach I become, because of my drowning hopes that keeps me out of the circle of richies and honor. I'm the distance they keep like plague, because I have no physical wealth and glamour like them. But in all my stony falls and griefs, the word of restoration in the blood given to me upon the altar of salvation, I cling. For in the end, mercy will attend my situation and see to my hard labor with crown of great success.
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Darmie O-Lujon
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Loftus grew up with a cold father who taught her nothing about love but everything about angles. A mathematician, he showed her the beauty of the triangle's strong tip, the circumference of the circle, the rigorous mission of calculus. Her mother was softer, more dramatic, prone to deep depressions. Loftus tells all this to me with little feeling "I have no feelings about this right now," she says, "but when I'm in the right space I could cry." I somehow don't believe her; she seems so far from real tears, from the original griefs, so immersed in the immersed in the operas of others. Loftus recalls her father asking her out to see a play, and in the car, coming home at night, the moon hanging above them like a stopwatch, tick tick, her father saying to her, "You know, there's something wrong with your mother. She'll never be well again. Her father was right. When Loftus was fourteen, her mother drowned in the family swimming pool. She was found floating face down in the deep end, in the summer. The sun was just coming up, the sky a mess of reds and bruise. Loftus recalls the shock, the siren, an oxygen mask clamped over her mouth as she screamed, "Mother mother mother," hysteria. That is a kind of drowning. "I loved her," Loftus says. "Was it suicide?" I ask. She says, "My father thinks so.
Every year when I go home for Christmas, my brothers and I think about it, but we'll never know," she says. Then she says, "It doesn't matter." "What doesn't matter?" I ask. "Whether it was or it wasn't," she says. "It doesn't matter because it's all going to be okay." Then I hear nothing on the line but some static. on the line but some static. "You there?" I say. "Oh I'm here," she says. "Tomorrow I'm going to Chicago, some guy on death row, I'm gonna save him. I gotta go testify. Thank God I have my work," she says. "You've always had your work," I say. "Without it," she says, "Where would I be?
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Lauren Slater (Opening Skinner's Box: Great Psychological Experiments of the Twentieth Century)
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Upon the listening spirit of God fell also the unspoken part of the prayer. He commandeth me to put it into words. Listen! Β βLord our Father, our young patriots, idols of our hearts, go forth into battle β be Thou near them! With them β in spirit β we also go forth from the sweet peace of our beloved firesides to smite the foe. O Lord our God, help us tear their soldiers to bloody shreds with our shells; help us to cover their smiling fields with the pale forms of their patriot dead; help us to drown the thunder of the guns with the shrieks of their wounded, writhing in pain; help us to lay waste their humble homes with a hurricane of fire; help us to wring the hearts of their unoffending widows with unavailing grief; help us to turn them out roofless with their little children to wander unfriended in the wastes of their desolated land in rags and hunger and thirst, sports of the sun flames in summer and the icy winds of winter, broken in spirit, worn with travail, imploring thee for the refuge of the grave and denied it β Β For our sakes who adore Thee, Lord, blast their hopes, blight their lives, protract their bitter pilgrimmage, make heavy their steps, water their way with their tears, stain the white snow with the blood of their wounded feet! Β We ask it, in the spirit of love, of Him Who is the Source of Love, and Who is the ever-faithful refuge and friend of all that are sore beset and seek His aid with humble and contrite hearts. Amen. Β (After a pause.) βYe have prayed it; if ye still desire it, speak! The messenger of the Most High waits.β Β β¦
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Mark Twain