Nirvana Lyric Quotes

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According to Lacey I had the lyrics all wrong. I sang like it sounded to me, because those words sounded right: I loved you I'm not going back I killed you I'm not going back.
Robin Wasserman (Girls on Fire)
Narrative is a stratagem of mortality. It is a means, a way of living. It does not seek immortality; it does not seek to triumph over or escape from time (as lyric poetry does). It asserts, affirms, participates in directional time, time experienced, time as meaningful. If the human mind had a temporal spectrum, the nirvana of the physicist or the mystic would be way over in the ultraviolet, and at the opposite end, in the infrared, would be wuthering Heights.
Ursula K. Le Guin (Dancing at the Edge of the World: Thoughts on Words, Women, Places)
Mallory started up the engine and fiddled with the radio, finally settling on an old Nirvana song. Something about a mulatto and an albino and a mosquito. The lyrics made absolutely no sense, but hearing a familiar song pulled me back into my everyday world and made me feel better.
Karen McQuestion (Edgewood (Edgewood #1))
Yet neither of them seemed fazed by this as they were living exciting adventures daily. I felt like the odd man out, provincial even, as they waxed lyrical about Nirvana and grunge, while I smouldered with barely concealed envy. Sabah
Sumayya Lee (The Story of Maha)
In the last ten years, that Christian bubble has popped. Parents today are woefully aware that the Christian subculture they so gladly embraced as adolescents did not provide the safety it promised. The sex abuse scandals, the devastation left in the wake of purity culture, and the mass church exodus these things caused have made it impossible to ignore any longer: the bubble may have kept some harmful stuff out, but it also allowed a different form of harm to grow unchallenged. Kids were protected from the lyrics in Nirvana or Alanis Morissette songs but not from sixty-year-old elders who blamed their lust problems on preteen girls.
Sheila Wray Gregoire (She Deserves Better: Raising Girls to Resist Toxic Teachings on Sex, Self, and Speaking Up)