Je M'en Fous Quotes

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Je ne vois pas la raison. Je ne regrette rien. Je m'en fous.
Nicolas Barreau (The Ingredients of Love)
Pour vivre heureux, vivons incultes? Je dis non! Vivre heureux, je m'en fous!
Didier van Cauwelaert (La Fin du monde tombe un jeudi (Thomas Drimm, #1))
...mais leurs avis, au fond, je m'en fous, je ne juge pas leurs choix, alors il faut me laisser libre maintenant, libre de tenter d'être heureuse.
David Foenkinos (Le Mystère Henri Pick)
Vaut-il mieux avoir le squelette à l'intérieur ou à l'extérieur du corps ? [...] J'ai vu des humains qui avaient forgé grâce à leur esprit des carapaces "intellectuelles" les protégeant des contrariétés. Ils semblaient plus solides que la moyenne. Ils disaient : "je m'en fous" et riaient de tout. Mais lorsqu'une contrariété arrivait à passer leur carapace les dégâts étaient terribles. J'ai vu des humains souffrir de la moindre contrariété, du moindre effleurement, mais leur esprit ne se fermait pas pour autant, ils restaient sensibles à tout et apprenaient de chaque agression.
Bernard Werber (La Trilogie des Fourmis)
A little later, strolling about the town, I, stopped into a shop near the museum, where they sold souvenirs and post-cards. I looked over the cards leisurely; the ones I liked best were soiled and wrinkled. The man, who spoke French fluently, offered to make the cards presentable. He asked me to wait a few minutes while he ran over to the house and cleaned and ironed them. He said he would make them look like new. I was so dumbfounded that before I could say anything he had disappeared, leaving me in charge of the shop. After a few minutes his wife came in. I thought she looked strange for a Greek woman. After a few words had passed I realized that she was French and she, when she learned that I hailed from Paris, was overjoyed to speak with me. We got along beautifully until she began talking about Greece. She hated Crete, she said. It was too dry, too dusty, too hot, too bare. She missed the beautiful trees of Normandy, the gardens with the high walls, the orchards, and so on. Didn't I agree with her? I said NO, flatly. "Monsieur!" she said, rising up in her pride and dignity, as if I had slapped her in the face. "I don't miss anything," I said, pressing the point home. "I think this is marvellous. I don't like your gardens with their high walls, I don't like your pretty little orchards and your well-cultivated-fields. I like this …" and I pointed outdobrs to the dusty road on which a sorely-laden donkey was plodding along dejectedly. "But it's not civilized," she said, in a sharp, shrill voice which reminded me of the miserly tobacconiste in the Rue de la Tombe-Issoire. "Je m'en fous da la civilisation européenne!" I blurted out. "Monsieur!" she said again, her feathers ruffled and her nose turning blue with malice. Fortunately her husband reappeared at this point with the post-cards which he had given a dry-cleaning.
Henry Miller (The Colossus of Maroussi)
I know ‘Je m’en fous’ and ‘C’est quoi ce bordel?
Marlowe Granados (Happy Hour)
J'ai envie de toi – j'ai besoin de toi. Ça ne sert peut-être à rien de le dire – je ne sais pas – je m'en fous – je t'appelle – je t'attends.
Marceline Loridan-Ivens (L'Amour après)