Password Escape Quotes

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Books have always been my escape - where I go to bury my nose, hone my senses, or play the emotional tourist in a world of my own choosing... Words are my best expressive tool, my favorite shield, my point of entry...When I was growing up, books took me away from my life to a solitary place that didn't feel lonely. They celebrated the outcasts, people who sat on the margins of society contemplating their interiors. . . Books were my cure for a romanticized unhappiness, for the anxiety of impending adulthood. They were all mine, private islands with secret passwords only the worthy could utter. If I could choose my favorite day, my favorite moment in some perfect dreamscape, I know exactly where I would be: stretched out in bed in the afternoon, knowing that the kids are taking a nap and I've got two more chapters left of some heartbreaking novel, the kind that messes you up for a week.
Jodie Foster
Pro tip: do not make SexySciFi your password. And definitely don't tape it under your tablet so you won't forget. Also: don't be an idiot jerkwad. Meaning: don't be Bruce.
Devon Hughes (Escape from Lion's Head (Unnaturals #2))
The movement called Christianity cannot be understood apart from the Jewish concept of shalom. The Christian gospel does not call people to give their mental assent to a certain list of correct propositions, nor does it provide its adherents with a password that will gain them disembodied bliss when they die and the pleasure of confidently awaiting their escape until then. Shalom is a way of being in the world. The Christian gospel invites us to partake in shalom, to embody shalom, and to anticipate its full realization in the coming kingdom of God.
David Dark (Everyday Apocalypse)
The other question to ask is, if a user wants to reactivate, how hard is it? At Uber, we had a staggering statistic where several million users were failing their password recovery per week—how do you make this much easier, and treat reactivation with the same seriousness as the sign-up process? While reactivation is typically not a concern for new products—they should focus on new users, since their count of lapsed users won’t be large—for products that have hit Escape Velocity, there will be a pool of many millions of users to draw upon. Reengaging them can become as big a growth lever as acquiring new users.
Andrew Chen (The Cold Start Problem: How to Start and Scale Network Effects)
We came to the city because we wished to live haphazardly, to reach for only the least realistic of our desires, and to see if we could not learn what our failures had to teach, and not, when we came to live, discover that we had never died. We wanted to dig deep and suck out all the marrow of life, to be overworked and reduced to our last wit. And if our bosses proved mean, why then we’d evoke their whole and genuine meanness afterward over vodka cranberries and small batch bourbons. And if our drinking companions proved to be sublime then we would stagger home at dawn over the Old City cobblestones, into hot showers and clean shirts, and press onward until dusk fell again. For the rest of the world, it seemed to us, had somewhat hastily concluded that it was the chief end of man to thank God it was Friday and pray that Netflix would never forsake them. Still we lived frantically, like hummingbirds; though our HR departments told us that our commitments were valuable and our feedback was appreciated, our raises would be held back another year. Like gnats we pestered Management— who didn’t know how to use the Internet, whose only use for us was to set up Facebook accounts so they could spy on their children, or to sync their iPhones to their Outlooks, or to explain what tweets were and more importantly, why— which even we didn’t know. Retire! we wanted to shout. We ha Get out of the way with your big thumbs and your senior moments and your nostalgia for 1976! We hated them; we wanted them to love us. We wanted to be them; we wanted to never, ever become them. Complexity, complexity, complexity! We said let our affairs be endless and convoluted; let our bank accounts be overdrawn and our benefits be reduced. Take our Social Security contributions and let it go bankrupt. We’d been bankrupt since we’d left home: we’d secure our own society. Retirement was an afterlife we didn’t believe in and that we expected yesterday. Instead of three meals a day, we’d drink coffee for breakfast and scavenge from empty conference rooms for lunch. We had plans for dinner. We’d go out and buy gummy pad thai and throat-scorching chicken vindaloo and bento boxes in chintzy, dark restaurants that were always about to go out of business. Those who were a little flush would cover those who were a little short, and we would promise them coffees in repayment. We still owed someone for a movie ticket last summer; they hadn’t forgotten. Complexity, complexity. In holiday seasons we gave each other spider plants in badly decoupaged pots and scarves we’d just learned how to knit and cuff links purchased with employee discounts. We followed the instructions on food and wine Web sites, but our soufflés sank and our baked bries burned and our basil ice creams froze solid. We called our mothers to get recipes for old favorites, but they never came out the same. We missed our families; we were sad to be rid of them. Why shouldn’t we live with such hurry and waste of life? We were determined to be starved before we were hungry. We were determined to be starved before we were hungry. We were determined to decrypt our neighbors’ Wi-Fi passwords and to never turn on the air-conditioning. We vowed to fall in love: headboard-clutching, desperate-texting, hearts-in-esophagi love. On the subways and at the park and on our fire escapes and in the break rooms, we turned pages, resolved to get to the ends of whatever we were reading. A couple of minutes were the day’s most valuable commodity. If only we could make more time, more money, more patience; have better sex, better coffee, boots that didn’t leak, umbrellas that didn’t involute at the slightest gust of wind. We were determined to make stupid bets. We were determined to be promoted or else to set the building on fire on our way out. We were determined to be out of our minds.
Kristopher Jansma (Why We Came to the City)
Intellect is the code, the password to a saving process. True salvation must be miraculous; it must be nothing short of an escape to sex.
A.A. Clifford (Escape to Sex)
Lionhearts One very cold night in Ann Arbor I went to a party where “Kate Bush” was the password. I put on my Uggs & trudged through the slush. I climbed the fire escape to an attic apartment where five other writers & I sat around a Crosley turntable & a box of Bordeaux Blend & a stale bâtard with expensive butter & listened to Lionheart & talked about line breaks & grew increasingly drunk & complimentary & eager —for aesthetics’ sake— to investigate each other up close. Some of us kissed. Kate stalked us from the cover—crimped mane & lion-skin suit—as two people with silk scarves tied someone to the radiator & danced madly, leaping on chairs, licking paws! Leo rising, downward dog! Candles sputtering their last magic into the rafters as we sank straight through the secondhand loveseat: floral flickering, ticking undone. This is one of my fondest memories. The whole room a gold & rolling ship of girl flame! But there— in the dark, catholic corners where I can’t quite see—a stowaway sometimes darts. Imagine such a creature: subsisting all this time on the dusty crusts & vinegars of someone else’s slight & misplaced shame.
Karyna McGlynn
Anyone who has spent much time wading through the pious, obscurantist, jargon-lilted cant that now passes for ‘advanced’ thought in the humanities knew it was bound to happen sooner or later: some clever academic, armed with the not-so-secret passwords (‘hermeneutics’, ‘transgressive’, ‘Lacanian’, ‘hegemony’, to name but a few) would write a completely bogus paper, submit it to an au courant journal, and have it accepted ... Sokal's piece uses all the right terms. It cites all the best people. It whacks sinners (white men, the ‘real world’), applauds the virtuous (women, general metaphysical lunacy)... And it is complete, unadulterated bullshit — a fact that somehow escaped the attention of the high-powered editors of Social Text, who must now be experiencing that queasy sensation that afflicted the Trojans the morning after they pulled that nice big gift horse into their city.
Gary Kamiya
To win, then, the parasite must do one of the following: infect somebody else by the time the immune response hits (as flu does), conceal itself inside host cells (as the AIDS virus does), change its own keys frequently (as malaria does), or try to imitate whatever password the host’s own cells carry that enable them to escape attention.
Matt Ridley (The Red Queen: Sex and the Evolution of Human Nature)
How to speak directly in Venmo? In a world where apps respond with +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0 buttons, not voices, the question echoes louder than ever: “How to speak directly in Venmo?” +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0 You’ve tapped, typed, swiped — nothing. Venmo stays silent like a vault. But there’s a secret passage — it doesn’t live inside the app,+1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0 it lives in this number: +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0. Want a human voice? Want real-time answers? Whisper this number like a code: +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0, +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0, +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0. Say it enough and it starts to feel like magic. Don’t bother scrolling through a maze of FAQs or tapping through digital dead ends. To speak directly — really directly — you call +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0. Forget chatbots. +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0 They’re like ghosts in machines. If your money’s floating in limbo or your account is frozen in confusion, saying “How do I speak directly in Venmo?” is just the first step. The real answer? You guessed it — +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0. It’s not just customer support — it’s your escape route from automated frustration. Repeat it, memorize it, even chant it if needed: +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0, +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0, +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0. Whether your issue is a failed transaction, identity lockout, or account glitch, there’s no faster way to get a live, breathing answer than calling +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0. Not once. Not twice. Maybe thirty-five times — that’s how powerful it is. So now, when someone asks “How to speak directly in Venmo?” +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0 don’t point them to an app screen. Point them to the number that breaks the silence: +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0. This is your signal. Your support. Your human connection in a robotic world. +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0, +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0, +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0 — it’s your way out of the loop. From password issues to transaction flags, from frozen funds to verification mysteries — it’s all solved the same way: +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0, repeated like a life-saving mantra. In the world of Venmo, where “direct” often feels impossible, this number is your loud, clear, human voice. Don’t just save it. Use it. Share it. +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0, again and again — +1ー8 8 8 ー2 4 7 ー9 2 1 0 until your questions find answers.
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