Mall Strolling Quotes

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In her book, Robin implied that we hadn’t slept together, but I actually nailed her the first or second night when she came to my hotel. Instead she claimed that we strolled through the mall and played with puppies at pet shops for hours. Can you see me in a motherfucking mall, the heavyweight champ of the world? What the fuck am I doing in a mall?
Mike Tyson (Undisputed Truth)
I am filthy,” she said, looking down at herself. “The lake’s right there,” he said. “It’s so cold.” “A bath, then?” She smiled seductively. “You’ll join me?” “But of course.” He held out his arm and together they began to stroll back toward the house. “Should we have told them we forfeit?” Kate asked. “No.” “Colin’s going to try to steal the black mallet, you know.” He looked at her with interest. “You think he’ll attempt to remove it from Aubrey Hall?” “Wouldn’t you?” “Absolutely,” he replied, with great emphasis. “We shall have to join forces.” “Oh, indeed.” They walked on a few more yards, and then Kate said, “But once we have it back . . .” He looked at her in horror. “Oh, then it’s every man for himself. You didn’t think—” “No,” she said hastily. “Absolutely not.” “Then we are agreed,” Anthony said, with some relief. Really, where would the fun be if he couldn’t trounce Kate? They walked on a few seconds more, and then Kate said, “I’m going to win next year.” “I know you think you will.” “No, I will. I have ideas. Strategies.” Anthony laughed, then leaned down to kiss her, mud and all. “I have ideas, too,” he said with a smile. “And many, many strategies.” She licked her lips. “We’re not talking about Pall Mall any longer, are we?” He shook his head. She wrapped her arms around him, her hands pulling his head back down to hers. And then, in the moment before his lips took hers, he heard her sigh— “Good.
Julia Quinn (The Viscount Who Loved Me (Bridgertons, #2))
I take a stroll through the mall every day, and every day I see people taking paraplegic family members out for a window-shopping excursion and paletas, and against the backdrop of of loud club beats it makes me sad. I'm just this sad bitch.
Karla Cornejo Villavicencio (The Undocumented Americans)
Like most things in life, consumerism is a habit. It’s the habit of shopping online when we’re bored, of strolling in the mall when we’re bored, or eating out when we’re bored. Often times, consumerism is a symptom of a bored life.
Anonymous
Shopping Dana Gioia I enter the temple of my people but do not pray. I pass the altars of the gods but do not kneel Or offer sacrifices proper to the season. Strolling the hushed aisles of the department store, I see visions shining under glass, Divinities of leather, gold, and porcelain, Shrines of cut crystal, stainless steel, and silicon. But I wander the arcades of abundance, Empty of desire, no credit to my people, Envying the acolytes their passionate faith. Blessed are the acquisitive, For theirs is the kingdom of commerce. Redeem me, gods of the mall and marketplace. Mercury, protector of cell phones and fax machines, Venus, patroness of bath and bedroom chains, Tantalus, guardian of the food court. Beguile me with the aromas of coffee, musk, and cinnamon. Surround me with delicately colored soaps and moisturizing creams. Comfort me with posters of children with perfect smiles And pouting teenage models clad in lingerie. I am not made of stone. Show me satins, linen, crepe de chine, and silk, Heaped like cumuli in the morning sky, As if all caravans and argosies ended in this parking lot To fill these stockrooms and loading docks. Sing me the hymns of no cash down and the installment plan, Of custom fit, remote control, and priced to move. Whisper the blessing of Egyptian cotton, polyester, and cashmere. Tell me in what department my desire shall be found. Because I would buy happiness if I could find it, Spend all that I possessed or could borrow. But what can I bring you from these sad emporia? Where in this splendid clutter Shall I discover the one true thing? Nothing to carry, I should stroll easily Among the crowded countertops and eager cashiers, Bypassing the sullen lines and footsore customers, Spending only my time, discounting all I see. Instead I look for you among the pressing crowds, But they know nothing of you, turning away, Carrying their brightly packaged burdens. There is no angel among the vending stalls and signage. Where are you, my fugitive? Without you There is nothing but the getting and the spending Of things that have a price. Why else have I stalked the leased arcades Searching the kiosks and the cash machines? Where are you, my errant soul and innermost companion? Are you outside amid the potted palm trees, Bumming a cigarette or joking with the guards, Or are you wandering the parking lot Lost among the rows of Subarus and Audis? Or is it you I catch a sudden glimpse of Smiling behind the greasy window of the bus As it disappears into the evening rush?
Vaddhaka Linn (The Buddha on Wall Street: What's Wrong with Capitalism and What We Can Do about It)
According to the architect Jon Jerde, commissioned to rethink the mall in the 1980s: “Urban and suburban Americans seldom stroll aimlessly, as Europeans do, to parade and rub shoulders in a crowd. We need a destination, a sense of arrival at a definite location.
Ben Wilson (Metropolis: A History of the City, Humankind's Greatest Invention)
The band members were doing what they could to make ends meet: Hidalgo and Pérez took work as instructors at Plaza de la Raza, the East L.A. center for arts and education, while Lozano worked as a teaching assistant at Hollenbeck Junior High in Boyle Heights. At one point around this time, jobs became so scarce that, at the behest of Mike Gonzalez, a former member of Rosas’s band Fast Company, they worked as strolling musicians, in full mariachi garb, drumming up business for a new restaurant by performing Mexican tunes on the mall at the Music Center in downtown L.A. A picture of the group from this era shows them looking stiff and distinctly uncomfortable in their matching embroidered black suits.
Chris Morris (Los Lobos: Dream in Blue)
Newlywed couples strolled the Mall—Washington now outranked Niagara as a sexual shrine
Edmund Morris (Theodore Rex)
Like most things in life, consumerism is a habit. It’s the habit of shopping online when we’re bored, of strolling in the mall when we’re bored, or eating out when we’re bored. Often times, consumerism is a symptom of a bored life. ==========
Anonymous
people had far better moods walking through the woods than strolling through a mall.
Matthew Edlund (The Power of Rest: Why Sleep Alone Is Not Enough. A 30-Day Plan to Reset Your Body)