β
Don't bend; don't water it down; don't try to make it logical; don't edit your own soul according to the fashion. Rather, follow your most intense obsessions mercilessly.
β
β
Franz Kafka
β
When you stop expecting people to be perfect, you can like them for who they are.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
If the moon smiled, she would resemble you.
You leave the same impression
Of something beautiful, but annihilating.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
So the writer who breeds more words than he needs, is making a chore for the reader who reads.
β
β
Dr. Seuss
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
Out of the ash
I rise with my red hair
and I eat men like air.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
Kill your darlings, kill your darlings, even when it breaks your egocentric little scribblerβs heart, kill your darlings.
β
β
Stephen King (On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft)
β
There were valuable first editions of books in the enormous library, most of them had been scribbled in by some idiot named Will H.
β
β
Cassandra Clare (Lord of Shadows (The Dark Artifices, #2))
β
So early in my life, I had learned that if you want something, you had better make some noise.
β
β
Malcolm X (The Autobiography of Malcolm X [Japanese-Language Edition].)
β
To write is human, to edit is divine.
β
β
Stephen King (On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft)
β
Nostalgia is also a dangerous form of comparison. Think about how often we compare our lives to a memory that nostalgia has so completely edited that it never really existed.
β
β
BrenΓ© Brown
β
Most of what I say is complete truth. My edit button is broken.
β
β
Myra McEntire (Hourglass (Hourglass, #1))
β
I cannot endure to waste anything so precious as autumnal sunshine by staying in the house."
[Notebook, Oct. 10, 1842]
β
β
Nathaniel Hawthorne (The American Notebooks: The Centenary Edition)
β
We shall not cease from exploration
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.
Through the unknown, remembered gate
When the last of earth left to discover
Is that which was the beginning;
At the source of the longest river
The voice of the hidden waterfall
And the children in the apple-tree
Not known, because not looked for
But heard, half-heard, in the stillness
Between two waves of the sea.
βT.S. Eliot, from βLittle Gidding,β Four Quartets (Gardners Books; Main edition, April 30, 2001) Originally published 1943.
β
β
T.S. Eliot (Four Quartets)
β
A professional writer is an amateur who didn't quit.
β
β
Richard Bach
β
Put down everything that comes into your head and then you're a writer. But an author is one who can judge his own stuff's worth, without pity, and destroy most of it."
(Casual Chance, 1964)
β
β
Colette
β
You know what I think?" she says. "That people's memories are maybe the fuel they burn to stay alive. Whether those memories have any actual importance or not, it doesn't matter as far as the maintenance of life is concerned. They're all just fuel. Advertising fillers in the newspaper, philosophy books, dirty pictures in a magazine, a bundle of ten-thousand-yen bills: when you feed 'em to the fire, they're all just paper. The fire isn't thinking 'Oh, this is Kant,' or 'Oh, this is the Yomiuri evening edition,' or 'Nice tits,' while it burns. To the fire, they're nothing but scraps of paper. It's the exact same thing. Important memories, not-so-important memories, totally useless memories: there's no distinction--they're all just fuel.
β
β
Haruki Murakami (After Dark)
β
The silence isn't so bad, till I look at my hands and feel sad. Because the spaces between my fingers are right where yours fit perfectly.
β
β
Owl City (Ocean Eyes [Deluxe Edition])
β
I wish I were a girl again, half savage and hardy, and free... Why am I so changed? I'm sure I should be myself were I once among the heather on those hills.
β
β
Emily BrontΓ« (Wuthering Heights: Includes eBook, Library Edition)
β
Fear is a manipulative emotion that can trick us into living a boring life.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Edit your life frequently and ruthlessly. It's your masterpiece after all.
β
β
Nathan W. Morris
β
You can't edit a blank page
β
β
Jodi Picoult
β
Iβve always felt that the best place to hide a body is in the trunk of a cop car, with a note affixed to the body that reads, βIβm sorry.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
Jesus promised his disciples three thingsβthat they would be completely fearless, absurdly happy, and in constant trouble.
β
β
William Barclay (The Gospel of Luke - Enlarged Print Edition (The New Daily Study Bible))
β
But Paris was a very old city and we were young and nothing was simple there, not even poverty, nor sudden money, nor the moonlight, nor right and wrong nor the breathing of someone who lay beside you in the moonlight.
β
β
Ernest Hemingway (A Moveable Feast: The Restored Edition)
β
I have taken a pill to kill
The thin
Papery feeling.
--from "Cut", written 24 October 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
Is it the sea you hear in me?
Its dissatisfactions?
Or the voice of nothing, that was your madness?
Love is a shadow.
How you lie and cry after it.
--from "Elm", written 19 April 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
Every thing you love is very likely to be lost, but in the end, love will return in a different way.
β
β
Franz Kafka (Kafka's Selected Stories: A Norton Critical Edition)
β
Just tell your story. Pretty much all memory is fiction and heavily edited. So just keep going.
β
β
Iain Reid (I'm Thinking of Ending Things)
β
I want to protect innocent people from sin by locking them in cages, where the evil can't get to them.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
I've got a war in my mind
β
β
Lana Del Rey (Lana Del Rey - Born to Die Paradise Edition | Piano Vocal Guitar Sheet Music & Songbook for Singers and Musicians | 23 Iconic Pop Ballads Transcribed for Piano Players and Vocalists |Artist Collection)
β
Making love to me is amazing. Wait, I meant: making love, to me, is amazing. The absence of two little commas nearly transformed me into a sex god.β¨
β
β
Dark Jar Tin Zoo (Love Quotes for the Ages. Specifically Ages 19-91.)
β
We're all born with selfish desires, so we can all relate to those feelings in others. But kindness is something made individually by each person...so it's easy to misunderstand when others are trying to be kind to you.
β
β
Natsuki Takaya (Fruits Basket Ultimate Edition, Vol. 3)
β
You can't edit a blank page
β
β
Nora Roberts
β
I've got my warrior name, too!"
Crookedjaw?"
How did you guess?" A purr rumbled in his throat.
Because your tail's still straight.
β
β
Erin Hunter (Bluestar's Prophecy (Warriors Super Edition, #2))
β
Remove the comma, replace the comma, remove the comma, replace the comma...
β
β
R.D. Ronald
β
The mind self-edits. The mind airbrushes. It's a different thing to be inside a body than outside. From outside, you can look, inspect, compare. From inside there is no comparison.
β
β
Jeffrey Eugenides (Middlesex)
β
We're so quick to cut away pieces of ourselves to suit a particular relationship, a job, a circle of friends, incessantly editing who we are until we fit in.
β
β
Charles de Lint (Happily Ever After)
β
The story itself, the true story, is the one that the audience members create in their minds, guided and shaped by my text, but then transformed, elucidated, expanded, edited, and clarified by their own experience, their own desires, their own hopes and fears.
β
β
Orson Scott Card (Enderβs Game (Ender's Saga, #1))
β
I am but mad north-north-west. When the wind is southerly, I know a hawk from a handsaw.
β
β
William Shakespeare (Illustrated Shakespeare (RHUK) Editions: Hamlet)
β
It's in our biology to trust what we see with our eyes. This makes living in a carefully edited, overproduced and photoshopped world very dangerous.
β
β
BrenΓ© Brown
β
I think I could turn and live with animals, they are so placid and self-containβd, I stand and look at them long and long.
They do not sweat and whine about their condition, They do not lie awake in the dark and weep for their sins, They do not make me sick discussing their duty to God, Not one is dissatisfied, not one is demented with the mania of owning things, Not one kneels to another, nor to his kind that lived thousands of years ago, Not one is respectable or unhappy over the whole earth.
β
β
Walt Whitman (Leaves of Grass: The Death-Bed Edition)
β
Take care of the sense and the sounds will take care of themselves.
β
β
Lewis Carroll (The Annotated Alice: The Definitive Edition)
β
You can always edit a bad page. You can't edit a blank page.
β
β
Jodi Picoult
β
Get immersed in the beauty that surrounds you. No filters, edits, or adjustments. Experience the colors, sounds, textures and smells within your reach. Live.
β
β
C. Toni Graham
β
I'm writing a first draft and reminding myself that I'm simply shoveling sand into a box so that later I can build castles.
β
β
Shannon Hale
β
The only time I really think is when I smoke, and I quit smoking years ago.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
It is so much simpler to bury reality than it is to dispose of dreams. β Don DeLillo, Americana (ACTES SUD; 0 edition, August 10, 1993)
β
β
Don DeLillo (AmΓ©ricana)
β
Iβve often wondered why more science textbooks donβt tell teenagers that the only thing sharks like to eat more than fish, are dead prostitutes.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
There Are Two Typos Of People In This World: Those Who Can Edit And Those Who Canβt
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
Where there is anger there is always pain underneath.
β
β
Eckhart Tolle (The Power of Now (Korean Edition) (Korean))
β
Why worry about minor little details like clean air, clean water, safe ports and the safety net when Jesus is going to give the world an "Extreme Makeover: Planet Edition" right after he finishes putting Satan in his place once and for all?
β
β
Arianna Huffington
β
When you write a book, you spend day after day scanning and identifying the trees. When youβre done, you have to step back and look at the forest.
β
β
Stephen King (On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft)
β
Sometimes I wish Jim Morrison were still alive, because I'd love to see a concert in which "The Doors" opened up for "The Cars.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
She was so evidently the victim of the civilization which had produced her, that the links of her bracelet seemed like manacles chaining her to her fate.
β
β
Edith Wharton (The House of Mirth (Dover Thrift Editions: Classic Novels))
β
It is perfectly okay to write garbage--as long as you edit brilliantly.
β
β
C.J. Cherryh
β
To live in a culture in which women are routinely naked where men aren't is to learn inequality in little ways all day long. So even if we agree that sexual imagery is in fact a language, it is clearly one that is already heavily edited to protect men's sexual--and hence social--confidence while undermining that of women.
β
β
Naomi Wolf (The Beauty Myth)
β
Now I am silent, hate
Up to my neck,
Thick, thick.
I do not speak.
--from "Lesbos", written 18 October 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
Write drunk; edit sober.
β
β
Peter De Vries (Reuben, Reuben)
β
And once you live a good story, you get a taste for a kind of meaning in life, and you can't go back to being normal; you can't go back to meaningless scenes stitched together by the forgettable thread of wasted time.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
She wanted to go over and hug his tears away, but she was too frightened.
β
β
Steven Spielberg (Close Encounters of the Third Kind: The Special Edition)
β
Immortality,' said Crake, ' is a concept. If you take 'mortality' as being, not death, but the foreknowledge of it and the fear of it, then 'immortality' is the absence of such fear. Babies are immortal. Edit out the fear, and you'll be...
β
β
Margaret Atwood (Oryx and Crake (MaddAddam, #1))
β
Cheap editions of great books may be delightful, but cheap editions of great men are absolutely detestable
β
β
Oscar Wilde (The Critic As Artist: With Some Remarks on the Importance of Doing Nothing and Discussing Everything (Green Integer))
β
My name is Echo. I dream of cats with stars in their fur.
β
β
Erin Hunter (Firestar's Quest (Warriors Super Edition, #1))
β
Those who are not shocked when they first come across quantum theory cannot possibly have understood it.
β
β
Niels Bohr (Essays 1932-1957 on Atomic Physics and Human Knowledge (The Philosophical Writings of Niels Bohr, Vol. 2) (English and Danish Edition))
β
My hobbies include editing my life story, hiding behind metaphors
And trying to convince my shadow that Iβm someone worth following
β
β
Rudy Francisco
β
I used to pray to recover you.
--from "Daddy", written 12 October 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
You smile.
No, it is not fatal.
--from "The Other", written 2 July 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
But life isn't something that should be edited. Life shouldn't be cut. The only way you'll ever discover what it truly means to be alive and human is by sharing the full experience of what it means to be human and each blemish and freckle that comes with it.
β
β
Iain S. Thomas
β
Every woman adores a Fascist,
The boot in the face, the brute
Brute heart of a brute like you.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
People were like Russian nesting dolls - versions stacked inside the latest edition. But they all still lived inside, unchanged, just out of sight.
β
β
Megan Miranda (All the Missing Girls)
β
People were always the limiters of happiness except for the very few that were as good as spring itself.
β
β
Ernest Hemingway (A Moveable Feast: The Restored Edition)
β
I have a real problem keeping friends. I'm always running out of space in my freezer.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
Nothing comes from without; all things come from within - from the subconscious
β
β
Neville Goddard (RESURRECTION: Revised & Updated Edition)
β
Be silent and listen: have you recognized your madness and do you admit it? Have you noticed that all your foundations are completely mired in madness? Do you not want to recognize your madness and welcome it in a friendly manner? You wanted to accept everything. So accept madness too. Let the light of your madness shine, and it will suddenly dawn on you. Madness is not to be despised and not to be feared, but instead you should give it life...If you want to find paths, you should also not spurn madness, since it makes up such a great part of your nature...Be glad that you can recognize it, for you will thus avoid becoming its victim. Madness is a special form of the spirit and clings to all teachings and philosophies, but even more to daily life, since life itself is full of craziness and at bottom utterly illogical. Man strives toward reason only so that he can make rules for himself. Life itself has no rules. That is its mystery and its unknown law. What you call knowledge is an attempt to impose something comprehensible on life.
β
β
C.G. Jung (The Red Book: A Reader's Edition)
β
The human body essentially recreates itself every six months. Nearly every cell of hair and skin and bone dies and another is directed to its former place. You are not who you were last November.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Please don't worry. It's a psychological complaint, common amongst ex-librarians. You see, she thinks she's a coffee table edition...
β
β
Alan Moore (Batman: The Killing Joke)
β
Every living thing is a masterpiece, written by nature and edited by evolution.
β
β
Neil deGrasse Tyson
β
The worst thing you can do is censor yourself as the pencil hits the paper. You must not edit until you get it all on paper. If you can put everything down, stream-of-consciousness, you'll do yourself a service.
β
β
Stephen Sondheim
β
My close friends are fond of telling me that I put the βyaltβ in loyalty. Well, I donβt know if Iβd go that far with it, but yeah, I guess I am a pretty yalty person.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
Instead of saying βI donβt have timeβ try saying βitβs not a priority,β and see how that feels. Often, thatβs a perfectly adequate explanation. I have time to iron my sheets, I just donβt want to. But other things are harder. Try it: βIβm not going to edit your rΓ©sumΓ©, sweetie, because itβs not a priority.β βI donβt go to the doctor because my health is not a priority.β If these phrases donβt sit well, thatβs the point. Changing our language reminds us that time is a choice. If we donβt like how weβre spending an hour, we can choose differently.
β
β
Laura Vanderkam
β
You will have five hundred million little bells, and I shall have five hundred million springs of fresh water...
β
β
Antoine de Saint-ExupΓ©ry (The Little Prince: Library Edition)
β
I am still raw.
I say I may be back.
You know what lies are for.
Even in your Zen heaven we shan't meet.
--from "Lesbos", written 18 October 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
Tigerkit was nagging his mother.
"Why can't I go out?"
"You've just come in."
"But it's a sunny day."
"You need a nap."
"I'm not tired."
"You will be later."
"I'll sleep then."
"But you'll be grumpy all afternoon if you don't nap now."
"No, I won't."
"Yes, you will.
β
β
Erin Hunter (Bluestar's Prophecy (Warriors Super Edition, #2))
β
I've found the best way to revise your own work is to pretend that somebody else wrote it and then to rip the living shit out of it.
β
β
Don Roff
β
The general root of superstition : namely, that men observe when things hit, and not when they miss; and commit to memory the one, and forget and pass over the other.
β
β
Francis Bacon (The Collected Works of Sir Francis Bacon (Unexpurgated Edition) (Halcyon Classics))
β
Books let us into their souls and lay open to us the secrets of our own."
[The Sick Chamber (The New Monthly Magazine , August 1830)]
β
β
William Hazlitt (Essays of William Hazlitt: Selected and Edited, with Introduction and Notes, by Frank Carr)
β
Consider anything, only donβt cry!
β
β
Lewis Carroll (Through the Looking-Glass (Dover Thrift Editions: Classic Novels))
β
I know the bottom, she says. I know it with my great tap root:
It is what you fear.
I do not fear it: I have been there.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
To wander is to be alive.
β
β
Roman Payne (The Love of Europa: Limited Time Edition (Only the First Chapters))
β
Everyone complains of his memory, and no one complains of his judgment.
β
β
FranΓ§ois de La Rochefoucauld (RΓ©flexions, Ou Sentences Et Maximes Morale (Γd.1665) (Litterature) (French Edition))
β
Let us be grateful to the mirror for revealing to us our appearance only.
β
β
Maggie Stiefvater (Blue Lily, Lily Blue (The Raven Cycle, #3) (Free Preview Edition))
β
Iβd love to work with an Asian guy named Wu Hu, because just saying his name would get me all pumped up and excited.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
Being alive is sign of strength!
β
β
Hiro Mashima (γγ§γ’γͺγΌγγ€γ« 31 θ¬θ«η€Ύγγ£γ©γ―γΏγΌγΊA [FearΔ« Teiru 31 Special Edition DVD Bundle] (Fairy Tail, #31))
β
There is a charge
For the eyeing of my scars, there is a charge
For the hearing of my heart -
It really goes.
And there is a charge, a very large charge,
For a word or a touch
Or a bit of blood
Or a piece of my hair or my clothes.
--from "Lady Lazarus", written 23-29 October 1962
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
A story is based on what people think is important, so when we live a story, we are telling people around us what we think is important.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Genius, in truth, means little more than the faculty of perceiving in an unhabitual way.
β
β
William James (The Writings of William James: A Comprehensive Edition)
β
He woke her then, and trembling and obedient, she ate that burning heart out of his hand. Weeping, I saw him then depart from me. Could he daily feel a stab of hunger for her? Find nourishment in the very sight of her? I think so. But would she see through the bars of his plight, and ache for him?
β
β
Dante Alighieri
β
She knows who she is. She just forgot for a little while.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
I am always glad when any of my books can be put into an inexpensive edition, because I like to think that any people who might wish to read them can do so. Surely books ought to be within reach of everybody.
β
β
Pearl S. Buck (The Good Earth (House of Earth, #1))
β
What we hunger for perhaps more than anything else is to be known in our full humanness, and yet that is often just what we also fear more than anything else. It is important to tell at least from time to time the secret of who we truly and fully are . . . because otherwise we run the risk of losing track of who we truly and fully are and little by little come to accept instead the highly edited version which we put forth in hope that the world will find it more acceptable than the real thing. It is important to tell our secrets too because it makes it easier . . . for other people to tell us a secret or two of their own . . .
β
β
Frederick Buechner (Telling Secrets: A Celebrated Author's Candid Memoir of a Father's Suicide and Its Influence on a Son and Minister)
β
Keep your eye on the doughnut, not on the hole.
β
β
David Lynch (Catching the Big Fish: Meditation, Consciousness, and Creativity: 10th Anniversary Edition)
β
We all have our flaws. But we overcome them. And sometimes, it's our flaws that make us who we are.
β
β
Erin Hunter (Tallstar's Revenge (Warriors Super Edition, #6))
β
It wasn't necessary to win for the story to be great, it was only necessary to sacrifice everything.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Thereβs no material safety data sheet for astatine. If there were, it would just be the word βNOβ scrawled over and over in charred blood.
β
β
Randall Munroe (What If? 10th Anniversary Edition: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions)
β
Love is something you do for someone else, not something you do for yourself.
β
β
Gary Chapman (The Five Love Languages Singles Edition)
β
Isaac was still clinging to the lectern. He started to cry. He pressed his forehead down to the podium and I watched his shoulders shake, and then finally, he said, 'Goddamn it, Augustus, editing your own eulogy.'
'Don't swear in the Literal Heart of Jesus,' Gus said.
'Goddamn it," Isaac said again.
β
β
John Green (The Fault in Our Stars)
β
I was just a screw or cog in the great machine I called life, and when I dropped out of it I found I was of no use anywhere else.
β
β
Edith Wharton (The House of Mirth (Dover Thrift Editions: Classic Novels))
β
Humans are suspicious and jealous creatures. When they see something perfect, they want to find a flaw.
β
β
Gosho Aoyama (Detective Conan: Showdown with the Phantom Thief Kid Special Edition)
β
Mary praise the rosary for my broken mind.
β
β
Lana Del Rey (Lana Del Rey - Born to Die Paradise Edition | Piano Vocal Guitar Sheet Music & Songbook for Singers and Musicians | 23 Iconic Pop Ballads Transcribed for Piano Players and Vocalists |Artist Collection)
β
Flowers and fear are a lot alike. For one, flowers and fear have a distinct smell, and two, Iβm currently trying to grow both in my garden.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
I think this is when most people give up on their stories. They come out of college wanting to change the world, wanting to get married, wanting to have kids and change the way people buy office supplies. But they get into the middle and discover it was harder than they thought. They can't see the distant shore anymore, and they wonder if their paddling is moving them forward. None of the trees behind them are getting smaller and none of the trees ahead are getting bigger. They take it out on their spouses, and they go looking for an easier story.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Moral codes are like the ocean. Some people live by them, while others, such as myself, would rather live by a lake.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
Without poets, without artists... everything would fall apart into chaos. There would be no more seasons, no more civilizations, no more thought, no more humanity, no more life even; and impotent darkness would reign forever. Poets and artists together determine the features of their age, and the future meekly conforms to their edit.
β
β
Guillaume Apollinaire (Selected Writings)
β
Donβt fight the darkness. Donβt even worry about the darkness. Turn on the light and the darkness goes. Turn up that light of pure consciousness: Negativity goes.
β
β
David Lynch (Catching the Big Fish: Meditation, Consciousness, and Creativity: 10th Anniversary Edition)
β
Love doesn't erase the past, but it makes the future different.
β
β
Gary Chapman (The Five Love Languages Singles Edition)
β
Every creative person, and I think probably every other person, faces resistance when they are trying to create something good...The harder the resistance, the more important the task must be.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Don't look back until you've written an entire draft, just begin each day from the last sentence you wrote the preceding day. This prevents those cringing feelings, and means that you have a substantial body of work before you get down to the real work which is all in ... the edit."
[Ten rules for writing fiction (part two), The Guardian, 20 February 2010]
β
β
Will Self
β
The most important aspect of Christianity is not the work we do, but the relationship we maintain and the surrounding influence and qualities produced by that relationship. That is all God asks us to give our attention to, and it is the one thing that is continually under attack.
β
β
Oswald Chambers (My Utmost for His Highest, Updated Edition)
β
I love tables. And dancing. Oh, and I love table dancing, although Grandmother always says, "Wait until we're finished eating.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
The only thing that can hurt me is being apart from you.
β
β
Erin Hunter (Bluestar's Prophecy (Warriors Super Edition, #2))
β
I have rewritten β often several times β every word I have ever published. My pencils outlast their erasers.
β
β
Vladimir Nabokov (Speak, Memory)
β
Ash, ash β-
You poke and stir.
Flesh, bone, there is nothing thereββ
A cake of soap,
A wedding ring,
A gold filling.
Herr God, Herr Lucifer
Beware
Beware.
Out of the ash
I rise with my red hair
And I eat men like air.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
Your cause of sorrow must not be measured by his worth, for then it hath no end.
β
β
William Shakespeare (Macbeth: Playgoer's Edition (ARDEN SHAKESPEARE PLAYGOER'S EDITION))
β
Over the long run, however, the real reason you fail to stick with habits is that your self-image gets in the way. This is why you can't get too attached to one version of your identity. Progress requires unlearning. Becoming the best version of yourself requires you to continuously edit your beliefs, and to upgrade and expand your identity.
β
β
James Clear (Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones)
β
Fear isnβt only a guide to keep us safe; itβs also a manipulative emotion that can trick us into living a boring life β¦ the great stories go to those who donβt give in to fear.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Histories make men wise; poets, witty; the mathematics, subtle; natural philosophy, deep; moral, grave; logic and rhetoric, able to contend.
β
β
Francis Bacon (The Collected Works of Sir Francis Bacon (Unexpurgated Edition) (Halcyon Classics))
β
Springsteen is the king, don't you think? I was like, hell yeah, that guy can sing.
β
β
Lana Del Rey (Lana Del Rey - Born to Die Paradise Edition | Piano Vocal Guitar Sheet Music & Songbook for Singers and Musicians | 23 Iconic Pop Ballads Transcribed for Piano Players and Vocalists |Artist Collection)
β
Poets are not so scrupulous as you are. They know how useful passion is for publication. Nowadays a broken heart will run to many editions."
"I hate them for it," cried Hallward. "An artist should create beautiful things, but should put nothing of his own life into them. We live in an age when men treat art as if it were meant to be a form of autobiography. We have lost the abstract sense of beauty. Some day I will show the world what is it; and for that the world shall never see my portrait of Dorian Gray.
β
β
Oscar Wilde (The Picture of Dorian Gray)
β
Bluestar blinked. "There are cats who would argue that there should never have been a fifth Clan in the forest at all. Why are there four oaks at Fourtrees, if not to stand for the four Clans?"
Firestar gazed up at the massive oak trees, then back at Bluestar. Fury pure as a lighting flash rushed through his body. "Are you mouse-brained?" he snarled. "Are you telling me SkyClan had to leave because there weren't enough trees?
β
β
Erin Hunter (Firestar's Quest (Warriors Super Edition, #1))
β
In a real sense all life is inter-related. All men are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. I can never be what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be, and you can never be what you ought to be until I am what I ought to be...
This is the inter-related structure of reality.
β
β
Martin Luther King Jr. (Letter from Birmingham Jail: Martin Luther King Jr.'s Letter from Birmingham Jail and the Struggle That Changed a Nation: Library Edition)
β
With the world securely in order, Dain was able to devote the leisurely bath time to editing his mental dictionary. He removed his wife from the general category labeled "Females" and gave her a section of her own. He made a note that she didn't find him revolting, and proposed several explanations: (a) bad eyesight and faulty hearing, (b)a defect in a portion of her otherwise sound intellect, (c) an inherited Trent eccentricity, or (d) an act of God. Since the Almighty had not done him a single act of kindness in at least twenty-five years, Dain thought it was about bloody time, but he thanked his Heavenly Father all the same, and promised to be as good as he was capable of being.
β
β
Loretta Chase (Lord of Scoundrels (Scoundrels, #3))
β
The best part about being kidnapped is being blindfolded and getting kicked into the trunk of a car. Boy, normally I have to beg my friends to treat me that well.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
You're divine.
Didn't anyone ever tell you
It's OK to shine?
β
β
Lana Del Rey (Lana Del Rey - Born to Die Paradise Edition | Piano Vocal Guitar Sheet Music & Songbook for Singers and Musicians | 23 Iconic Pop Ballads Transcribed for Piano Players and Vocalists |Artist Collection)
β
Reading list (1972 edition)[edit]
1. Homer β Iliad, Odyssey
2. The Old Testament
3. Aeschylus β Tragedies
4. Sophocles β Tragedies
5. Herodotus β Histories
6. Euripides β Tragedies
7. Thucydides β History of the Peloponnesian War
8. Hippocrates β Medical Writings
9. Aristophanes β Comedies
10. Plato β Dialogues
11. Aristotle β Works
12. Epicurus β Letter to Herodotus; Letter to Menoecus
13. Euclid β Elements
14. Archimedes β Works
15. Apollonius of Perga β Conic Sections
16. Cicero β Works
17. Lucretius β On the Nature of Things
18. Virgil β Works
19. Horace β Works
20. Livy β History of Rome
21. Ovid β Works
22. Plutarch β Parallel Lives; Moralia
23. Tacitus β Histories; Annals; Agricola Germania
24. Nicomachus of Gerasa β Introduction to Arithmetic
25. Epictetus β Discourses; Encheiridion
26. Ptolemy β Almagest
27. Lucian β Works
28. Marcus Aurelius β Meditations
29. Galen β On the Natural Faculties
30. The New Testament
31. Plotinus β The Enneads
32. St. Augustine β On the Teacher; Confessions; City of God; On Christian Doctrine
33. The Song of Roland
34. The Nibelungenlied
35. The Saga of Burnt NjΓ‘l
36. St. Thomas Aquinas β Summa Theologica
37. Dante Alighieri β The Divine Comedy;The New Life; On Monarchy
38. Geoffrey Chaucer β Troilus and Criseyde; The Canterbury Tales
39. Leonardo da Vinci β Notebooks
40. NiccolΓ² Machiavelli β The Prince; Discourses on the First Ten Books of Livy
41. Desiderius Erasmus β The Praise of Folly
42. Nicolaus Copernicus β On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres
43. Thomas More β Utopia
44. Martin Luther β Table Talk; Three Treatises
45. FranΓ§ois Rabelais β Gargantua and Pantagruel
46. John Calvin β Institutes of the Christian Religion
47. Michel de Montaigne β Essays
48. William Gilbert β On the Loadstone and Magnetic Bodies
49. Miguel de Cervantes β Don Quixote
50. Edmund Spenser β Prothalamion; The Faerie Queene
51. Francis Bacon β Essays; Advancement of Learning; Novum Organum, New Atlantis
52. William Shakespeare β Poetry and Plays
53. Galileo Galilei β Starry Messenger; Dialogues Concerning Two New Sciences
54. Johannes Kepler β Epitome of Copernican Astronomy; Concerning the Harmonies of the World
55. William Harvey β On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals; On the Circulation of the Blood; On the Generation of Animals
56. Thomas Hobbes β Leviathan
57. RenΓ© Descartes β Rules for the Direction of the Mind; Discourse on the Method; Geometry; Meditations on First Philosophy
58. John Milton β Works
59. MoliΓ¨re β Comedies
60. Blaise Pascal β The Provincial Letters; Pensees; Scientific Treatises
61. Christiaan Huygens β Treatise on Light
62. Benedict de Spinoza β Ethics
63. John Locke β Letter Concerning Toleration; Of Civil Government; Essay Concerning Human Understanding;Thoughts Concerning Education
64. Jean Baptiste Racine β Tragedies
65. Isaac Newton β Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy; Optics
66. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz β Discourse on Metaphysics; New Essays Concerning Human Understanding;Monadology
67. Daniel Defoe β Robinson Crusoe
68. Jonathan Swift β A Tale of a Tub; Journal to Stella; Gulliver's Travels; A Modest Proposal
69. William Congreve β The Way of the World
70. George Berkeley β Principles of Human Knowledge
71. Alexander Pope β Essay on Criticism; Rape of the Lock; Essay on Man
72. Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu β Persian Letters; Spirit of Laws
73. Voltaire β Letters on the English; Candide; Philosophical Dictionary
74. Henry Fielding β Joseph Andrews; Tom Jones
75. Samuel Johnson β The Vanity of Human Wishes; Dictionary; Rasselas; The Lives of the Poets
β
β
Mortimer J. Adler (How to Read a Book: The Classic Guide to Intelligent Reading)
β
My speech is imperfect. Not because I want to shine with words, but out of the impossibility of finding those words, I speak in images. With nothing else can I express the words from the depths.
β
β
C.G. Jung (The Red Book: A Reader's Edition)
β
Stop this day and night with me and you shall possess the origin of all poems,
You shall possess the good of the earth and sun.... there are millions of suns left,
You shall no longer take things at second or third hand.... nor look through the eyes of the dead.... nor feed on the spectres in books,
You shall not look through my eyes either, nor take things from me,
You shall listen to all sides and filter them from yourself.
β
β
Walt Whitman (Leaves of Grass: The First (1855) Edition)
β
A ring of gold with the sun in it?
Lies. Lies and a grief.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
...you cannot eat every tadpole and frog in the pond, but you can eat the biggest and ugliest one, and that will be enough, at least for the time being.
β
β
Brian Tracy (Eat That Frog!: 21 Great Ways to Stop Procrastinating and Get More Done in Less Time: Easyread Large Edition)
β
Don't bend; don't water it down; don't try to make it logical; don't edit your own soul according to the fashion. Rather, follow your most intense obsessions mercilessly. Only if you do that can you hope to make the reader feel every particle of what you, the writer, have known and feel compelled to share."---Forward to Kafka's Short stories
β
β
Anne Rice
β
Writing without revising is the literary equivalent of waltzing gaily out of the house in your underwear.
β
β
Patricia Fuller
β
The mind I love most must have wild places, a tangled orchard where dark damsons drop in the heavy grass, an overgrown little wood, the chance of a snake or two, a pool that nobody fathomed the depth of, and paths threaded with flowers planted by the mind.
β
β
Katherine Mansfield (Katherine Mansfield Notebooks: Complete Edition)
β
Come on you target for faraway laughter. Come on you stranger, you legend, you martyr, and shine!
β
β
David Gilmour (Pink Floyd: Wish You Were Here : Guitar Tab Edition [Songbook])
β
Itβs not the fall that kills you, itβs the sudden stop at the end.
β
β
Randall Munroe (What If? 10th Anniversary Edition: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions)
β
The body is literally manufactured and sustained by mind.
β
β
Paramahansa Yogananda (Autobiography of a Yogi (Illustrated and Annotated Edition))
β
Practice giving things away, not just things you don't care about, but things you do like. Remember, it is not the size of a gift, it is its quality and the amount of mental attachment you overcome that count. So don't bankrupt yourself on a momentary positive impulse, only to regret it later. Give thought to giving. Give small things, carefully, and observe the mental processes going along with the act of releasing the little thing you liked. (53)
(Quote is actually Robert A F Thurman but Huston Smith, who only wrote the introduction to my edition, seems to be given full credit for this text.)
β
β
Huston Smith (The Tibetan Book of the Dead, Liberation Through Understanding the Between)
β
Agonies are one of my changes of garments.
β
β
Walt Whitman (Leaves of Grass: The First (1855) Edition)
β
They say there are no stupid questions. Thatβs obviously wrong; I think my question about hard and soft things, for example, is pretty stupid. But it turns out that trying to thoroughly answer a stupid question can take you to some pretty interesting places.
β
β
Randall Munroe (What If? 10th Anniversary Edition: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions)
β
I make art for one person and one person only. And as soon as I find that one person, I sure hope he has a lot of wall space, because heβll be getting a lot of art from me.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
I'm doped and thick from my last sleeping pill.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
Whenever we leave the ground
And take to the sky
I'll smile as I'm gazing down
Cause I've always wonder why we won't need feathers to fly.
β
β
Owl City (Ocean Eyes [Deluxe Edition])
β
I don't want to work a 9-5 job, because 20 hours a day is just too much.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
Iβm glad scrambled eggs donβt have lips, because when Iβm grinning over a hearty breakfast, it would really freak me out to see my breakfast grinning back. Iβve eaten a man for less than that.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
The clear awareness of having been born into a losing struggle need not lead one into despair. I do not especially like the idea that one day I shall be tapped on the shoulder and informed, not that the party is over but that it is most assuredly going onβonly henceforth in my absence. (It's the second of those thoughts: the edition of the newspaper that will come out on the day after I have gone, that is the more distressing.) Much more horrible, though, would be the announcement that the party was continuing forever, and that I was forbidden to leave. Whether it was a hellishly bad party or a party that was perfectly heavenly in every respect, the moment that it became eternal and compulsory would be the precise moment that it began to pall.
β
β
Christopher Hitchens (Hitch 22: A Memoir)
β
Perfectionism means that you try desperately not to leave so much mess to clean up. But clutter and mess show us that life is being lived. Clutter is wonderfully fertile ground - you can still discover new treasures under all those piles, clean things up, edit things out, fix things, get a grip. Tidiness suggests that something is as good as it's going to get. Tidiness makes me think of held breath, of suspended animation, while writing needs to breathe and move.
β
β
Anne Lamott (Bird by Bird)
β
I will always be here. We will walk the skies together forever.
β
β
Erin Hunter (Firestar's Quest (Warriors Super Edition, #1))
β
The other day I went to the Huddle House. I wasnβt hungry, I just wanted to call some plays.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
I saw a bottle of conditioner the other day that said, "Family Size," and I thought, That's odd, I didn't know too many families showered together.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
You open the gates of the soul to let the dark flood of chaos flow into your order and meaning. If you marry the ordered to the chaos you produce the divine child, the supreme meaning beyond meaning and meaninglessness.
β
β
C.G. Jung (The Red Book: A Reader's Edition)
β
The sun gives you ulcers, the wind gives you T.B.
Once you were beautiful.
β
β
Sylvia Plath (Ariel: The Restored Edition)
β
In an ideal world the scientist should find a method to prevent the most severe forms of autism but allow the milder forms to survive. After all, the really social people did not invent the first stone spear. It was probably invented by an Aspie who chipped away at rocks while the other people socialized around the campfire. Without autism traits we might still be living in caves.
β
β
Temple Grandin (Thinking in Pictures, Expanded Edition: My Life with Autism)
β
When something happens to you, you have two choices in how to deal with it. You can either get bitter, or get better.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Like people would ever want to read books on an electronic screen.
β
β
Blake Crouch (Serial Uncut: Extended Edition)
β
I don't wonder anymore what I'll tell God when I go to heaven when we sit in the chairs under the tree, outside the city........I'll tell these things to God, and he'll laugh, I think and he'll remind me of the parts I forgot, the parts that were his favorite. We'll sit and remember my story together, and then he'll stand and put his arms around me and say, "well done," and that he liked my story. And my soul won't be thirsty anymore. Finally he'll turn and we'll walk toward the city, a city he will have spoken into existence a city built in a place where once there'd been nothing.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Take from my palms, to soothe your heart,
a little honey, a little sun,
in obedience to Persephone's bees.
You can't untie a boat that was never moored,
nor hear a shadow in its furs,
nor move through thick life without fear.
For us, all that's left is kisses
tattered as the little bees
that die when they leave the hive.
Deep in the transparent night they're still humming,
at home in the dark wood on the mountain,
in the mint and lungwort and the past.
But lay to your heart my rough gift,
this unlovely dry necklace of dead bees
that once made a sun out of honey.
β Osip Mandelstam, The Selected Poems (NYRB Classics; 1st edition, August 31, 2004) Originally published 1972
β
β
Osip Mandelstam (The Selected Poems)
β
My parents always said that knowledge was the best gift they could give me, probably because they were too cheap to buy me Christmas or Birthday presents.
β
β
Jarod Kintz (There are Two Typos of People in This World: Those Who Can Edit and Those Who Can't)
β
A grain of poetry suffices to season a century.
β
β
JosΓ© MartΓ (Versos Sencillos: Simple Verses (Recovering the Us Hispanic Literary Heritage) (Pinata Books for Young Adults) (English and Spanish Edition))
β
Chance or accident is not responsible for the things that happen to you, nor is predestined fate the author of your fortune or misfortune. Your subconscious impressions determine the conditions of your world. The subconscious is not selective; it is impersonal and no respecter of persons. The subconscious is not concerned with the truth or falsity of your feeling. It always accepts as true that which you feel to be true. Feeling is the assent of the subconscious to the truth of that which is declared to be true. Because of this quality of the subconscious there is nothing impossible to man. Whatever the mind of man can conceive and feel as true, the subconscious can and must objectify. Your feelings create the pattern from which your world is fashioned, and a change of feeling is a change of pattern.
β
β
Neville Goddard (RESURRECTION: Revised & Updated Edition)
β
No, no, no, no! Come, let's away to prison:
We two alone will sing like birds i' the cage:
When thou dost ask me blessing, I'll kneel down,
And ask of thee forgiveness: so we'll live,
And pray, and sing, and tell old tales, and laugh
At gilded butterflies, and hear poor rogues
Talk of court news; and we'll talk with them too,
Who loses and who wins; who's in, who's out;
And take upon's the mystery of things,
As if we were God's spies: and we'll wear out,
In a wall'd prison, packs and sects of great ones,
That ebb and flow by the moon.
β
β
William Shakespeare (The Tragedy Of King Lear (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) (Signet Classic Shakespeare))
β
Ah, that shows you the power of music, that magician of magician, who lifts his wand and says his mysterious word and all things real pass away and the phantoms of your mind walk before you clothed in flesh.
β
β
Mark Twain (Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc (Dover Thrift Editions: Classic Novels))
β
If the point of life is the same as the point of a story, the point of life is character transformation. If I got any comfort as I set out on my first story, it was that in nearly every story, the protagonist is transformed. He's a jerk at the beginning and nice at the end, or a coward at the beginning and brave at the end. If the character doesn't change, the story hasn't happened yet. And if story is derived from real life, if story is just condensed version of life then life itself may be designed to change us so that we evolve from one kind of person to another.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
You could have let that thing flatten me, but you didn't. Why?β
βI could ask you the same question.β
She was too tired to edit her mouth. βYou're my master. I couldn't let that thing kill another trapper, even if I think he's a total asshat.β
Harper looked at her for a long time then cracked a toothy grin. βAnd you're one mouthy bitch, but you're my apprentice. I don't need the reputation that my people die because I don't protect them.β
That was fair.
β
β
Jana Oliver (Forbidden (The Demon Trappers, #2))
β
There is someone I must say goodbye to. Oh, not you - we are sure to see each other again - but the Lily Bart you knew. I have kept her with me all this time, but now we are going to part, and I have brought her back to you - I am going to leave her here. When I go out presently she will not go with me. I shall like to think that she has stayed with you.
β
β
Edith Wharton (The House of Mirth (Dover Thrift Editions: Classic Novels))
β
She and Roman would survive this war. They would have the chance to grow old together, year by year. They would be friends until they both finally acknowledged the truth. And they would have everything that other couples hadβthe arguments and the hand-holding in the market and the gradual exploration of their bodies and the birthday celebrations and the journeys to new cities and the living as one and sharing a bed and the gradual sense of melting into each other. Their names would be entwinedβRoman and Iris or Winnow and Kitt because could you truly have one without the other?βand they would write on their typewriters and ruthlessly edit each otherβs pieces and read books by candlelight at night.
β
β
Rebecca Ross (Divine Rivals (Letters of Enchantment, #1))
β
But if renting all those movies had taught me anything more than how to lose myself in them, it was that you only actually have perfectly profound little moments like that in real life if you recognize them yourself, do all the fancy shot work and editing in your head, usually in the very seconds that whatever is happening is happening. And even if you do manage to do so, just about never does anyone else youβre with at the time experience that exact same kind of moment, and itβs impossible to explain it as itβs happening, and then the moment is over.
β
β
Emily M. Danforth (The Miseducation of Cameron Post)
β
But no matter the medicinal virtues of being a true friend or sustaining a long close relationship with another, the ultimate touchstone of friendship is not improvement, neither of the other nor of the self, the ultimate touchstone is witness, the privilege of having been seen by someone and the equal privilege of being granted the sight of the essence of another, to have walked with them and to have believed in them, and sometimes just to have accompanied them for however brief a span, on a journey impossible to accomplish alone.
β
β
David Whyte (Consolations - Revised edition: The Solace, Nourishment and Underlying Meaning of Everyday Words)
β
We live in a world where bad stories are told, stories that teach us life doesn't mean anything and that humanity has no great purpose. It's a good calling, then, to speak a better story. How brightly a better story shines. How easily the world looks to it in wonder. How grateful we are to hear these stories, and how happy it makes us to repeat them.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
How came the bodies of animals to be contrived with so much art, and for what ends were their several parts?
Was the eye contrived without skill in Opticks, and the ear without knowledge of sounds?...and these things being rightly dispatchβd, does it not appear from phΓ¦nomena that there is a Being incorporeal, living, intelligent...?
β
β
Isaac Newton (Opticks: Or a Treatise of the Reflections, Refractions, Inflections & Colours of Light-Based on the Fourth Edition London, 1730)
β
I have come to believe that by and large the human family all has the same secrets, which are both very telling and very important to tell. They are telling in the sense that they tell what is perhaps the central paradox of our conditionβthat what we hunger for perhaps more than anything else is to be known in our full humanness, and yet that is often just what we also fear more than anything else. It is important to tell at least from time to time the secret of who we truly and fully areβeven if we tell it only to ourselvesβbecause otherwise we run the risk of losing track of who we truly and fully are and little by little come to accept instead the highly edited version which we put forth in hope that the world will find it more acceptable than the real thing. It is important to tell our secrets too because it makes it easier that way to see where we have been in our lives and where we are going. It also makes it easier for other people to tell us a secret or two of their own, and exchanges like that have a lot to do with what being a family is all about and what being human is all about.
β
β
Frederick Buechner (Telling Secrets: A Celebrated Author's Candid Memoir of a Father's Suicide and Its Influence on a Son and Minister)
β
Cultivo una rosa blanca,
En julio como en enero,
Para el amigo sincero
Que me da su mano franca.
Y para el cruel que me arranca
El corazon con que vivo,
Cardo ni oruga cultivo
Cultivo una rosa blanca.
I have a white rose to tend
In July as in January;
I give it to the true friend
Who offers his frank hand to me.
And to the cruel one whose blows
Break the heart by which I live,
Thistle nor thorn do I give:
For him, too, I have a white rose.
β
β
JosΓ© MartΓ (Versos Sencillos: Simple Verses (Recovering the Us Hispanic Literary Heritage) (Pinata Books for Young Adults) (English and Spanish Edition))
β
So it is written - but so, too, it is crossed out. You can write it over again. You can make notes in the margins. You can cut out the whole page. You can, and you must, edit and rewrite and reshape and pull out the wrong parts like bones and find just the thing and you can forever, forever, write more and more and more, thicker and longer and clearer. Living is a paragraph, constantly rewritten. It is Grown-Up Magic. Children are heartless; their parents hold them still, squirming and shouting, until a heart can get going in their little lawless wilderness. Teenagers crash their hearts into every hard and thrilling thing to see what will give and what will hold. And Grown-Ups, when they are very good, when they are very lucky, and very brave, and their wishes are sharp as scissors, when they are in the fullness of their strength, use their hearts to start their story over again.
β
β
Catherynne M. Valente (The Girl Who Soared Over Fairyland and Cut the Moon in Two (Fairyland, #3))
β
Wandering is the activity of the child, the passion of the genius; it is the discovery of the self, the discovery of the outside world, and the learning of how the self is both "at one with" and "separate from" the outside world. These discoveries are as fundamental to the soul as "learning to survive" is fundamental to the body. These discoveries are essential to realizing what it means to be human. To wander is to be alive.
β
β
Roman Payne (The Love of Europa: Limited Time Edition (Only the First Chapters))
β
A human being is primarily a bag for putting food into; the other functions and faculties may be more godlike, but in point of time they come afterwards. A man dies and is buried, and all his words and actions are forgotten, but the food he has eaten lives after him in the sound or rotten bones of his children. I think it could be plausibly argued that changes of diet are more important than changes of dynasty or even of religion....Yet it is curious how seldom the all-importance of food is recognized. You see statues everywhere to politicians, poets, bishops, but none to cooks or bacon-curers or market gardeners.
β
β
George Orwell (The Road To Wigan Pier: (Authorized Orwell Edition): A Mariner Books Classic)
β
Sometimes when I watch my dog, I think about how good life can be, if we only lose ourselves in our stories. Lucy doesn't read self-help books about how to be a dog; she just IS a dog. All she wants to do is chase ducks and sticks and do other things that make both her and me happy. It makes me wonder if that was the intention for man, to chase sticks and ducks, to name animals, to create families, and to keep looking back at God to feed off his pleasure at our pleasure.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
When the starry sky, a vista of open seas, or a stained-glass window shedding purple beams fascinate me, there is a cluster of meaning, of colors, of words, of caresses, there are light touches, scents, sighs, cadences that arise, shroud me, carry me away, and sweep me beyond the things I see, hear, or think, The "sublime" object dissolves in the raptures of a bottomless memory. It is such a memory, which, from stopping point to stopping point, remembrance to remembrance, love to love, transfers that object to the refulgent point of the dazzlement in which I stray in order to be.
β
β
Julia Kristeva (Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection (European Perspectives: a Series in Social Thought & Cultural Ctiticism) (English and French Edition))
β
I do not like postmodernism, postapocalyptic settings, postmortem narrators, or magic realism. I rarely respond to supposedly clever formal devices, multiple fonts, pictures where they shouldn't beβbasically, gimmicks of any kind. I find literary fiction about the Holocaust or any other major world tragedy to be distastefulβnonfiction only, please. I do not like genre mash-ups Γ la the literary detective novel or the literary fantasy. Literary should be literary, and genre should be genre, and crossbreeding rarely results in anything satisfying. I do not like children's books, especially ones with orphans, and I prefer not to clutter my shelves with young adult. I do not like anything over four hundred pages or under one hundred fifty pages. I am repulsed by ghostwritten novels by reality television stars, celebrity picture books, sports memoirs, movie tie-in editions, novelty items, andβI imagine this goes without sayingβvampires.
β
β
Gabrielle Zevin (The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry)
β
I've wondered, though, if one of the reasons we fail to acknowledge the brilliance of life is because we don't want the responsibility inherent in the acknowledgment. We don't want to be characters in a story because characters have to move and breathe and face conflict with courage. And if life isn't remarkable, then we don't have to do any of that; we can be unwilling victims instead of grateful participants.
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
From p. 40 of Signet Edition of Thomas Wolfe's _You Can't Go Home Again_ (1940):
Some things will never change. Some things will always be the same. Lean down your ear upon the earth and listen.
The voice of forest water in the night, a woman's laughter in the dark, the clean, hard rattle of raked gravel, the cricketing stitch of midday in hot meadows, the delicate web of children's voices in bright air--these things will never change.
The glitter of sunlight on roughened water, the glory of the stars, the innocence of morning, the smell of the sea in harbors, the feathery blur and smoky buddings of young boughs, and something there that comes and goes and never can be captured, the thorn of spring, the sharp and tongueless cry--these things will always be the same.
All things belonging to the earth will never change--the leaf, the blade, the flower, the wind that cries and sleeps and wakes again, the trees whose stiff arms clash and tremble in the dark, and the dust of lovers long since buried in the earth--all things proceeding from the earth to seasons, all things that lapse and change and come again upon the earth--these things will always be the same, for they come up from the earth that never changes, they go back into the earth that lasts forever. Only the earth endures, but it endures forever.
The tarantula, the adder, and the asp will also never change. Pain and death will always be the same. But under the pavements trembling like a pulse, under the buildings trembling like a cry, under the waste of time, under the hoof of the beast above the broken bones of cities, there will be something growing like a flower, something bursting from the earth again, forever deathless, faithful, coming into life again like April.
β
β
Thomas Wolfe (You Can't Go Home Again)
β
I was told
The average girl begins to plan her wedding at the age of 7
She picks the colors and the cake first
By the age of 10
She knows time,
And location
By 17
Sheβs already chosen a gown
2 bridesmaids
And a maid of honor
By 23
Sheβs waiting for a man
Who wont break out in hives when he hears the word βcommitmentβ
Someone who doesnβt smell like a Band-Aid drenched in lonely
Someone who isnβt a temporary solution to the empty side of the bed
Someone
Whoβll hold her hand like itβs the only one theyβve ever seen
To be honest
I donβt know what kind of tux Iβll be wearing
I have no clue what want my wedding will look like
But I imagine
The women who pins my last to hers
Will butterfly down the aisle
Like a 5 foot promise
I imagine
Her smile
Will be so large that youβll see it on google maps
And know exactly where our wedding is being held
The woman that I plan to marry
Will have champagne in her walk
And I will get drunk on her footsteps
When the pastor asks
If I take this woman to be my wife
I will say yes before he finishes the sentence
Iβll apologize later for being impolite
But I will also explain him
That our first kiss happened 6 years ago
And Iβve been practicing my βYesβ
For past 2, 165 days
When people ask me about my wedding
I never really know what to say
But when they ask me about my future wife
I always tell them
Her eyes are the only Christmas lights that deserve to be seen all year long
I say
She thinks too much
Misses her father
Loves to laugh
And sheβs terrible at lying
Because her face never figured out how to do it correctl
I tell them
If my alarm clock sounded like her voice
My snooze button would collect dust
I tell them
If she came in a bottle
I would drink her until my vision is blurry and my friends take away my keys
If she was a book
I would memorize her table of contents
I would read her cover-to-cover
Hoping to find typos
Just so we can both have a few things to work on
Because arenβt we all unfinished?
Donβt we all need a little editing?
Arenβt we all waiting to be proofread by someone?
Arenβt we all praying they will tell us that we make sense
She donβt always make sense
But her imperfections are the things I love about her the most
I donβt know when I will be married
I donβt know where I will be married
But I do know this
Whenever Iβm asked about my future wife
I always say
β¦Sheβs a lot like you
β
β
Rudy Francisco
β
Naturally, we are inclined to be so mathematical and calculating that we look upon uncertainty as a bad thing...Certainty is the mark of the common-sense life. To be certain of God means that we are uncertain in all our ways, we do not know what a day may bring forth. This is generally said with a sigh of sadness; it should rather be an expression of breathless expectation.
β
β
Oswald Chambers (My Utmost for His Highest, Updated Edition)
β
Write poorly.
Suck.
Write Awful.
Terribly.
Frightfully.
Donβt care.
Turn off the inner editor.
Let yourself write.
Let it flow.
Let yourself fail.
Do something crazy.
Write 50,000 words in the month of November.
I did it.
It was fun.
It was insane.
It was 1,667 words per day.
It was possible, but you have to turn off the inner critic off completely.
Just write.
Quickly.
In bursts.
With joy.
If you canβt write, run away.
Come back.
Write again.
Writing is like anything else.
You wonβt get good at it immediately.
Itβs a craft.
You have to keep getting better.
You donβt get to Juilliard unless you practice.
You want to get to Carnegie Hall?
Practice. Practice. Practice ..or give them a lot of money.
Like anything else it takes 10,000 hours to get to mastery.
Just like Malcolm Gladwell says.
So write.
Fail.
Get your thoughts down.
Let it rest.
Let is marinate.
Then edit, but donβt edit as you type.
That just slows the brain down.
Find a daily practice.
For me itβs blogging.
Itβs fun.
The more you write the easier it gets.
The more it is a flow, the less a worry.
Itβs not for school, itβs not for a grade, itβs just to get your thoughts out there.
You know they want to come out.
So keep at it.
Make it a practice.
Write poorly.
Write awfully.
Write with abandon and it may end up being really really good.
β
β
Colleen Hoover
β
We create the world that we perceive, not because there is no reality outside our heads, but because we select and edit the reality we see to conform to our beliefs about what sort of world we live in. The man who believes that the resources of the world are infinite, for example, or that if something is good for you then the more of it the better, will not be able to see his errors, because he will not look for evidence of them. For a man to change the basic beliefs that determine his perception - his epistemological premises - he must first become aware that reality is not necessarily as he believes it to be. Sometimes the dissonance between reality and false beliefs reaches a point when it becomes impossible to avoid the awareness that the world no longer makes sense. Only then is it possible for the mind to consider radically different ideas and perceptions.
β
β
Gregory Bateson (Steps to an Ecology of Mind: Collected Essays in Anthropology, Psychiatry, Evolution, and Epistemology)
β
If you watched a movie about a guy who wanted a Volvo and worked for years to get it, you wouldnβt cry at the end when he drove off the lot, testing the windshield wipers. You wouldnβt tell your friends you saw a beautiful movie or go home and put a record on to think about the story youβd seen. The truth is, you wouldn't remember that movie a week later, except youβd feel robbed and want your money back. Nobody cries at the end of a movie about a guy who wants a Volvo.
But we spend years actually living those stories, and expect our lives to be meaningful. The truth is, if what we choose to do with our lives won't make a story meaningful, it wonβt make a life meaningful either
β
β
Donald Miller (A Million Miles in a Thousand Years: What I Learned While Editing My Life)
β
Poor, unhappy Erik! Shall we pity him? Shall we curse him? He asked only to be 'someone,' like everybody else. But he was too ugly! And he had to hide his genius or use it to play tricks with, when, with an ordinary face, he would have been one of the most distinguished of mankind! He had a heart that could have held the empire of the world; and in the end had to content himself with a cellar. Surely we must pity the Opera ghost!
β
β
Gaston Leroux (The Phantom of the Opera)
β
This is my attempt to make sense of the period that followed, weeks and then months that cut loose any fixed idea I had ever had about death, about illness, about probability and luck, about good fortune and bad, about marriage and children and memory, about grief, about the ways in which people do and do not deal with the fact that life ends, about the shallowness of sanity, about life itself. I have been a writer my entire life. As a writer, even as a child, long before what I wrote began to be published, I developed a sense that meaning itself was resident in the rhythms of words and sentences and paragraphs, a technique for withholding whatever it was I thought or believed behind an increasingly impenetrable polish. The way I write is who I am, or have become, yet this is a case in which I wish I had instead of words and their rhythms a cutting room, equipped with an Avid, a digital editing system on which I could touch a key and collapse the sequence of time, show you simultaneously all the frames of memory that come to me now, let you pick the takes, the marginally different expressions, the variant readings of the same lines. This is a case in which I need more than words to find the meaning. This is a case in which I need whatever it is I think or believe to be penetrable, if only for myself.
β
β
Joan Didion (The Year of Magical Thinking)
β
Nora Stephens,β he says, βIβve racked my brain and this is the best I can come up with, so I really hope you like it.β
His gaze lifts, everything about it, about his face, about his posture, about him made up of sharp edges and jagged bits and shadows, all of it familiar, all of it perfect. Not for someone else, maybe, but for me.
βI move back to New York,β he says. βI get another editing job, or maybe take up agenting, or try writing again. You work your way up at Loggia, and weβre both busy all the time, and down in Sunshine Falls, Libby runs the local business she saved, and my parents spoil your nieces like the grandkids they so desperately want, and Brendan probably doesnβt get much better at fishing, but he gets to relax and even take paid vacations with your sister and their kids. And you and Iβwe go out to dinner.
βWherever you want, whenever you want. We have a lot of fun being city people, and weβre happy. You let me love you as much as I know I can, for as long as I know I can, and you have it fucking all. Thatβs it. Thatβs the best I could come up with, and I really fucking hope you sayββ
I kiss him then, like there isnβt someone reading one of the Bridgerton novels five feet away, like weβve just found each other on a deserted island after months apart. My hands in his hair, my tongue catching on his teeth, his palms sliding around behind me and squeezing me to him in the most thoroughly public groping weβve managed yet.
βI love you, Nora,β he says when we pull apart a few inches to breathe. βI think I love everything about you.
β
β
Emily Henry (Book Lovers)
β
He said that manβs heart was the only bad heart in the animal kingdom; that man was the only animal capable of feeling malice, envy, vindictiveness, revengefulness, hatred, selfishness, the only animal that loves drunkenness, almost the only animal that could endure personal uncleanliness and a filthy habitation, the sole animal in whom was fully developed the base instinct called patriotism, the sole animal that robs, persecutes, oppresses and kills members of his own tribe, the sole animal that steals and enslaves the members of any tribe.
β
β
Mark Twain (Autobiography of Mark Twain: The Complete and Authoritative Edition, Volume 1)
β
I understand the mechanism of my own thinking. I know precisely how I know, and my understanding is recursive. I understand the infinite regress of this self-knowing, not by proceeding step by step endlessly, but by apprehending the limit. The nature of recursive cognition is clear to me. A new meaning of the term "self-aware."
Fiat logos. I know my mind in terms of a language more expressive than any I'd previously imagined. Like God creating order from chaos with an utterance, I make myself anew with this language. It is meta-self-descriptive and self-editing; not only can it describe thought, it can describe and modify its own operations as well, at all levels. What GΓΆdel would have given to see this language, where modifying a statement causes the entire grammar to be adjusted.
With this language, I can see how my mind is operating. I don't pretend to see my own neurons firing; such claims belong to John Lilly and his LSD experiments of the sixties. What I can do is perceive the gestalts; I see the mental structures forming, interacting. I see myself thinking, and I see the equations that describe my thinking, and I see myself comprehending the equations, and I see how the equations describe their being comprehended.
I know how they make up my thoughts.
These thoughts.
β
β
Ted Chiang (Stories of Your Life and Others)
β
Augustus Waters was a self-aggrandizing bastard. But we forgive him. We forgive him not because he had a heart as figuratively good as his literal one sucked, or because he knew more about how to hold a cigarette than any nonsmoker in history, or because he got eighteen years when he should've gotten more."
"Seventeen," Gus corrected.
"I'm assuming you've got some time, you interrupting bastard.
"I'm telling you," Isaac continued, "Augustus Waters talked so much that he'd interrupt you at his own funeral. And he was pretentious: Sweet Jesus Christ, that kid never took a piss without pondering the abundant metaphorical resonances of human waste production. And he was vain: I do not believe I have ever met a more physically attractive person who was more acutely aware of his own physical attractiveness.
"But I will say this: When the scientists of the future show up at my house with robot eyes and they tell me to try them on, I will tell the scientists to screw off, because I do not want to see a world without him." [...]
"And then, having made my rhetorical point, I will put my robot eyes on, because I mean, with robot eyes you can probably see through girlsβ shirts and stuff. Augustus, my friend, Godspeed."
Augustus nodded for a while, his lips pursed, and then gave Isaac a thumbs-up. After he'd recovered his composure, he added, "I would cut the bit about seeing through girls' shirts."
Isaac was still clinging to the lectern. He started to cry. He pressed his forehead down to the podium and I watched his shoulders shake, and then finally, he said, "Goddamn it, Augustus, editing your own eulogy.
β
β
John Green (The Fault in Our Stars)
β
Not long ago, I advertised for perverse rules of grammar, along the lines of "Remember to never split an infinitive" and "The passive voice should never be used." The notion of making a mistake while laying down rules ("Thimk," "We Never Make Misteaks") is highly unoriginal, and it turns out that English teachers have been circulating lists of fumblerules for years. As owner of the world's largest collection, and with thanks to scores of readers, let me pass along a bunch of these never-say-neverisms:
* Avoid run-on sentences they are hard to read.
* Don't use no double negatives.
* Use the semicolon properly, always use it where it is appropriate; and never where it isn't.
* Reserve the apostrophe for it's proper use and omit it when its not needed.
* Do not put statements in the negative form.
* Verbs has to agree with their subjects.
* No sentence fragments.
* Proofread carefully to see if you any words out.
* Avoid commas, that are not necessary.
* If you reread your work, you will find on rereading that a great deal of repetition can be avoided by rereading and editing.
* A writer must not shift your point of view.
* Eschew dialect, irregardless.
* And don't start a sentence with a conjunction.
* Don't overuse exclamation marks!!!
* Place pronouns as close as possible, especially in long sentences, as of 10 or more words, to their antecedents.
* Writers should always hyphenate between syllables and avoid un-necessary hyph-ens.
* Write all adverbial forms correct.
* Don't use contractions in formal writing.
* Writing carefully, dangling participles must be avoided.
* It is incumbent on us to avoid archaisms.
* If any word is improper at the end of a sentence, a linking verb is.
* Steer clear of incorrect forms of verbs that have snuck in the language.
* Take the bull by the hand and avoid mixed metaphors.
* Avoid trendy locutions that sound flaky.
* Never, ever use repetitive redundancies.
* Everyone should be careful to use a singular pronoun with singular nouns in their writing.
* If I've told you once, I've told you a thousand times, resist hyperbole.
* Also, avoid awkward or affected alliteration.
* Don't string too many prepositional phrases together unless you are walking through the valley of the shadow of death.
* Always pick on the correct idiom.
* "Avoid overuse of 'quotation "marks."'"
* The adverb always follows the verb.
* Last but not least, avoid cliches like the plague; seek viable alternatives."
(New York Times, November 4, 1979; later also published in book form)
β
β
William Safire (Fumblerules: A Lighthearted Guide to Grammar and Good Usage)