β
I'm not a religious person but I do sometimes think God made you for me.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Marianne had the sense that her real life was happening somewhere very far away, happening without her, and she didn't know if she would ever find out where it was or become part of it.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Life offers up these moments of joy despite everything,
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
It was culture as class performance, literature fetishised for its ability to take educated people on false emotional journeys, so that they might afterwards feel superior to the uneducated people whose emotional journeys they liked to read about.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
No one can be independent of other people completely, so why not give up the attempt, she thought, go running in the other direction, depend on people for everything, allow them to depend on you, why not.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Generally I find men are a lot more concerned with limiting the freedoms of women than exercising personal freedom for themselves.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Most people go through their whole lives, without ever really feeling that close with anyone.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Life is the thing you bring with you inside your own head.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
She believes Marianne lacks βwarmthβ, by which she means the ability to beg for love from people who hate her.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Marianne, he said, I'm not a religious person but I do sometimes think God made you for me.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
It's funny the decisions you make because you like someone, he says, and then your whole life is different. I think we're at that weird age where life can change a lot from small decisions.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Not for the first time Marianne thinks cruelty does not only hurt the victim, but the perpetrator also, and maybe more deeply and more permanently.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
If people appeared to behave pointlessly in grief, it was only because human life was pointless, and this was the truth that grief revealed.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
All these years, theyβve been like two little plants sharing the same plot of soil, growing around one another, contorting to make room, taking certain unlikely positions.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
I don't know what's wrong with me, says Marianne. I don't know why I can't be like normal people.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
She closes her eyes. He probably wonβt come back, she thinks. Or he will, differently. What they have now they can never have back again. But for her the pain of loneliness will be nothing to the pain that she used to feel, of being unworthy. He brought her goodness like a gift and now it belongs to her. Meanwhile his life opens out before him in all directions at once. Theyβve done a lot of good for each other. Really, she thinks, really. People can really change one another.
You should go, she says. Iβll always be here. You know that.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Her eyes fill up with tears again and she closes them. Even in memory she will find this moment unbearably intense, and she's aware of this now, while it's happening. She has never believed herself fit to be loved by any person. But now she has a new life, of which this is the first moment, and even after many years have passed she will still think: Yes, that was it, the beginning of my life.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
It feels powerful to him to put an experience down in words, like he's trapping it in a jar and it can never fully leave him.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Being alone with her is like opening a door away from normal life and then closing it behind him.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
People are a lot more knowable than they think they are.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Things matter to me more than they do to normal people, I thought. I need to relax and let things go. I should experiment with drugs.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Conversations with Friends)
β
Thereβs always been something inside her that men have wanted to dominate, and their desire for domination can look so much like attraction, even love.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Connell wished he knew how other people conducted their private lives, so that he could copy from example.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He has sincerely wanted to die, but he has never sincerely wanted Marianne to forget about him. Thatβs the only part of himself he wants to protect, the part that exists inside her.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
It suggests to Connell that the same imagination he used as a reader is necessary to understand real people also, and to be intimate with them.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Not for the first time Marianne thinks cruelty does not only hurt the victim, but the perpetrator also, and maybe more deeply and more permanently. You learn nothing very profound about yourself simply by being bullied; but by bullying someone else you learn something you can never forget.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
feeling a strange sense of nostalgia for a moment that was already in the process of happening.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
the pleasure of being touched by great artβ.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Lately heβs consumed by a sense that he is in fact two separate people, and soon he will have to choose which person to be on a full-time basis, and leave the other person behind.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
You learn nothing very profound about yourself simply by being bullied; but by bullying someone else you learn something you can never forget.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Theyβve done a lot of good for each other. Really, she thinks, really. People can really change one another.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
It's time you'll never get back, Marianne adds. I mean, the time is real. The money is also real. Well, but the time is more real. Time consists of physics, money is just a social construct.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He often makes blithe remarks about things he 'wishes'. I wish you didn't have to go, he says when she's leaving, or: I wish you could stay the night. If he really wished any of those things, Marianne knows, then they would happen. Connell always gets what he wants, and then feels sorry for himself when what he wants doesn't make him happy.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Still, Connell went home that night and read over some notes he had been making for a new story, and he felt the old beat of pleasure in his body, like watching a perfect goal, like the rustling movement of light through leaves, a phrase of music from the window of a passing car. Life offers up these moments of joy despite everything.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
It feels intellectually unserious to concern himself with fictional people marrying one another. But there it is: literature moves him. One of his professors calls it βthe pleasure of being touched by great art.β In those words it almost sounds sexual.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He brought her goodness like a gift and now it belongs to her.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
If she was different with Connell, the difference was not happening inside herself, in her personhood, but in between them, in the dynamic.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He was like a freezer item that had thawed too quickly on the outside and was melting everywhere, while the inside was still frozen solid. Somehow he was expressing more emotion than at any time in his life before, while simultaneously feeling less, feeling nothing.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Marianne wanted her life to mean something then, she wanted to stop all violence committed by the strong against the weak, and she remembered a time several years ago when she had felt so intelligent and young and powerful that she almost could have achieved such a thing, and now she knew she wasnβt at all powerful, and she would live and die in a world of extreme violence against the innocent, and at most she could only help a few people. It was so much harder to reconcile herself to the idea of helping a few, like she would rather help no one than do something so small and feeble
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He knows that a lot of the literary people in college see books primarily as a way of appearing cultured, It was culture as class performance, literature fetishised for its ability to take educated people on false emotional journeys, so that they might afterwards feel superior to the uneducated people whose emotional journeys they liked to read about. Even the writer himself was a good person, and even if his book really was insightful, all books were ultimately marketed as status symbols, and all writers participated to some degree in this marketing.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
She has never believed herself fit to be loved by any person. But now she has a new life, of which this is the first moment, and even after many years have passed she will still think: Yes, that was it, the beginning of my life.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
If he silently decides not to say something when theyβre talking, Marianne will ask βwhat?β within one or two seconds. This βwhat?β question seems to him to contain so much: not just the forensic attentiveness to his silences that allows her to ask in the first place, but a desire for total communication, a sense that anything unsaid is an unwelcome interruption between them.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
... the snow keeps falling, like a ceaseless repetition of the same infinitesimally small mistake.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
That's money, the substance that makes the world real. There's something so corrupt and sexy about it
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Could he really do the gruesome things he does to her and believe at the same time that heβs acting out of love? Is the world such an evil place, that love should be indistinguishable from the basest and most abusive forms of violence?
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Suddenly he can spend an afternoon in Vienna looking at Vermeerβs The Art of Painting, and itβs hot outside, and if he wants he can buy himself a cheap cold glass of beer afterwards. Itβs like something he assumed was just a painted backdrop all his life has revealed itself to be real: foreign cities are real, and famous artworks, and underground railway systems, and remnants of the Berlin Wall. Thatβs money, the substance that makes the world real. Thereβs something so corrupt and sexy about it.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
And hopefully I have changed, you know, as a person. But honestly, if I have, it's because of you.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
She tries to be a good person. But deep down she knows she is a bad person, corrupted, wrong, and all her efforts to be right, to have the right opinions, to say the right things, these efforts only disguise what is buried inside her, the evil part of herself.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Their feelings were suppressed so carefully in everyday life, forced into smaller and smaller spaces, until seemingly minor events took on insane and frightening significance. It was permissible to touch each other and cry during football matches.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
The outside world touches against her outside skin, but not the other part of herself, inside.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
At times a person will make eye contact with Marianne, a bus conductor or someone looking for change, and sheβll be shocked briefly into the realisation that this is in fact her life, that she is actually visible to other people. This feeling opens her to certain longings: hunger and thirst, a desire to speak Swedish, a physical desire to swim or dance.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
I think weβre at that weird age where life can change a lot from small decisions.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
People who intentionally become famous - I mean people who, after a little taste of fame, want more and more of it - are, and I honestly believe this, deeply psychologically ill. The fact that we are exposed to these people everywhere in our culture, as if they are not only normal but attractive and enviable, indicates the extent of our disfiguring social disease.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Beautiful World, Where Are You)
β
Marianne had a wildness that got into him for a while and made him feel that he was like her, that they had the same unnameable spiritual injury, and that neither of them could ever fit into the world. But he was never damaged like she was. She just made him feel that way.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Itβs not like this with other people, she says.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Multiple times he has tried writing his thoughts about Marianne down on paper in an effort to make sense of them. He's moved by a desire to describe in words exactly how she looks and speaks. Her hair and clothing. The copy of Swann's Way she reads at lunchtime in the school cafeteria, with a dark French painting on the cover and a mint-coloured spine. Her long fingers turning the pages. She's not leading the same kind of life as other people. She acts so worldly at times, making him feel ignorant, but then she can be so naive. He wants to understand how her mind works... He writes these things down, long run-on sentences with too many dependent clauses, sometimes connected with breathless semicolons, as if he wants to recreate a precise copy of Marianne in print, as if he can preserve her completely for future review.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
To me itβs weird when animals pause because they seem so intelligent, but maybe thatβs because I associate pausing with thought.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He tells her that sheβs beautiful. She has never heard that before, though she has sometimes privately suspected it of herself, but it feels different to hear it from another person.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
That was it, people moved away, he moved away. Their life in Carricklea, which they had imbued with such drama and significance, just ended like that with no conclusion, and it would never be picked back up again, never in the same way.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
No. I was frustrated sometimes but not lonely. I never feel lonely when I'm with you.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Thatβs the only part of himself he wants to protect, the part that exists inside her.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
The conversations that follow are gratifying for Connell, often taking unexpected turns and prompting him to express ideas he had never consciously formulated before. They talk about the novels he's reading, the research she studies, the precise historical moment that they are currently living in, the difficulty of observing such a moment in process. At times he has the sensation that he and Marianne are like figure-skaters, improvising their discussions so adeptly and in such perfect synchronisation that it suprises them both. She tosses herself gracefully into the air, and each time, without knowing how he's going to do it, he catches her.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
How strange to feel herself so completely under the control of another person, but also how ordinary. No one can be independent of other people completely, so why not give up the attempt, she thought, go running in the other direction, depend on people for everything, allow them to depend on you, why not.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
There's no such thing as bad weather, only bad clothes.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He did gradually start to wonder why all their classroom discussions were so abstract and lacking in textual detail, and eventually he realised that most people were not actually doing the reading. They were coming into college every day to have heated debates about books they had not read. He understands now that his classmates are not like him. It's easy for them to have opinions, and to express them with confidence. They don't worry about appearing ignorant or conceited.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
They were standing very close. She would have lain on the ground and let him walk over her body if he wanted, he knew that.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He understands now that his classmates are not like him. Itβs easy for them to have opinions, and to express them with confidence. They donβt worry about appearing ignorant or conceited. They are not stupid people, but theyβre not so much smarter than him either. They just move through the world in a different way, and heβll probably never really understand them, and he knows they will never understand him, or even try.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
[She] wonders what it would be like to belong here, to walk down the street greeting people and smiling. To feel that life was happening here, in this place, and not somewhere else far away.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Dublin is extraordinarily beautiful to her in wet weather, the way gray stone darkens to black, and rain moves over the grass and whispers on slick roof tiles. Raincoats glistening in the undersea color of street lamps. Rain silver as loose change in the glare of traffic.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
If anything, his personality seemed like something external to himself, managed by the opinions of others, rather than anything he individually did or produced. Now he has a sense of invisibility, nothingness, with no reputation to recommend him to anyone.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Marianne lived a drastically free life, he could see that. He was trapped by various considerations. He cared what people thought of him.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
At times he has the sensation that he and Marianne are like figure skaters, improvising their discussions so adeptly and in such perfect synchronisation that it surprises them both. She tosses herself gracefully into the air, and each time, without knowing how he's going to do it, he catches her.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He canβt help Marianne, no matter what he does. Thereβs something frightening about her, some huge emptiness in the pit of her being. Itβs like waiting for a lift to arrive and when the doors open nothing is there, just the terrible dark emptiness of the elevator shaft, on and on forever. Sheβs missing some primal instinct, self-defense or self-preservation, which makes other human beings comprehensible. You lean in expecting resistance, and everything just falls away in front of you.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Her gaze unsettles him like it used to, like looking into a mirror, seeing something that has no secrets from you.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
She felt happy to be surrounded by people she liked, who liked her. She knew that if she wanted to speak, people would probably turn around and listen out of sincere interest, and that made her happy too, although she had nothing at all to say.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
How often in life he has found himself a frustrated observer of apparently impenetrable systems, watching other people participate effortlessly in structures he can find no way to enter or even understand. So often that itβs practically baseline, just normal existence for him. And this is not only due to the irrational nature of other people, and the consequent irrationality of the rules and processes they devise; itβs due to Ivan himself, his fundamental unsuitedness to life. He knows this. He feels himself to have been formed, somehow, with something other than life in mind.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Intermezzo)
β
Their feelings were suppressed so carefully in everyday life, forced into smaller and smaller spaces, until seemingly minor events took on insane and frightening significance.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Her body is just an item of property, and though it has been handed around and misused in various ways, it has somehow always belonged to him, and she feels like returning it to him now.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
You need to get straight in your mind what you think a good society would look like, said Marianne. And if you think people should be able to go to college and get English degrees, you shouldn't feel guilty for doing that yourself, because you have every right to.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He feels ambivalent about this, as if itβs disloyal of him, because maybe heβs enjoying how she looks or some physical aspect of her closeness. Heβs not sure what friends are allowed to enjoy about each other.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
In the spring he would sometimes wake up at night beside Marianne, and if she was awake too they would move into each otherβs arms until he could feel himself inside her. He didnβt have to say anything, except to ask her if it was alright and she always said it was. Nothing else in his life compared to what he felt then. Often he wished he could fall asleep inside her body.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Things matter to me more than they do to normal people, I thought. I need to relax and let things go.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Conversations with Friends)
β
He does have immaculate taste. He's sensitive to the most minuscule of aesthetic failures, in painting, in cinema, even in novels or television shows. Sometimes when Marianne mentions a film she has recently watched, he waves his hand and says: It fails for me. This quality of discernment, she has realised, does not make Lukas a good person. He has managed to nurture a fine artistic sensitivity without ever developing any real sense of right and wrong. The fact that this is even possible unsettles Marianne, and makes art seem pointless suddenly.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
All these years theyβve been like two little plants sharing the same plot of soil, growing around one another, contorting to make room, taking certain unlikely positions. But in the end she has done something for him, sheβs made a new life possible, and she can always feel good about that.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
From a young age her life has been abnormal, she knows that. But so much is covered over in time now, the way leaves fall and cover a piece of earth, and eventually mingle with the soil. Things that happened to her then are buried in the earth of her body.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
This was probably the most horrifying thing Eric could have said to him, not because it ended his life, but because it didnβt. He knew then that the secret for which he had sacrificed his own happiness and the happiness of another person had been trivial all along, and worthless.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
She feels that even she doesnβt know what her family are like, that sheβs never adequate in her attempts to describe them, that she oscillates between exaggerating their behaviour, which makes her feel guilty, or downplaying it, which also makes her feel guilty, but a different guilt, more inwardly directed.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Marianne had the sense that her real life was happening somewhere very far away, happening without her, and she didnβt know if she would ever find out where it was and become part of it. She had that feeling in school often, but it wasnβt accompanied by any specific images of what the real life might look or feel like. All she knew was that when it started, she wouldnβt need to imagine it anymore.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
In just a few weeks' time Marianne will live with different people, and life will be different. But she herself will not be different. She'll be the same person, trapped inside her own body. There's nowhere she can go that would free her from this.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Things happened to him, like the crying fits, the panic attacks, but they seemed to descend on him from outside, rather than emanating from somewhere inside himself. Internally he felt nothing. He was like a freezer item that had thawed too quickly on the outside and was melting everywhere, while the inside was still frozen solid.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
It's like something he assumed was just a painted backdrop all his life has revealed itself to be real: foreign cities are real, and famous artworks, and underground railway systems, and remnants of the Berlin Wall. That's money, the substance that makes the world real. There's something so corrupt and sexy about it.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Thereβs always been something inside her that men have wanted to dominate, and their desire for domination can look so much like attraction, even love. In school the boys had tried to break her with cruelty and disregard, and in college men had tried to do it with sex and popularity, all with the same aim of subjugating some force in her personality. It depressed her to think people were so predictable. Whether she was respected or despised, it didnβt make much difference in the end. Would every stage of her life continue to reveal itself as the same thing, again and again, the same remorseless contest for dominance?
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He reaches for her hand and she gives it to him without thinking. For a second he holds it, his thumb moving over her knuckles. Then he lifts her hand to his mouth and kisses it. She feels pleasurably crushed under the weight of his power over her, the vast ecstatic depth of her will to please him. Thatβs nice, she says. He nods. She feels a low gratifying ache inside her body, in her pelvic bone, in her back.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He finds himself rushing to the end of the conversation so they can hang up, and then he can retrospectively savor how much he likes seeing her, without the moment-to-moment pressure of having to produce the right expressions and say the right things. Just to see Helen, her beautiful face, her smile, and to know that she continues loving him, this puts the gift of joy into his day, and for hours he feels nothing but a light-headed happiness.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Now she knows that in the intervening years Connell has been growing slowly more adjusted to the world, a process of adjustment that has been steady if sometimes painful, while she herself has been degenerating, moving further and further from wholesomeness, becoming something unrecognisably debased, and they have nothing left in common at all.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Denise decided a long time ago that it is acceptable for men to use aggression toward Marianne as a way of expressing themselves. As a child Marianne resisted, but now she simply detaches, as if it isnβt of any interest to her, which in a way it isnβt. Denise considers this a symptom of her daughterβs frigid and unlovable personality. She believes Marianne lacks βwarmth,β by which she means the ability to beg for love from people who hate her.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Last night he spent an hour and a half lying on the floor of his room, because he was too tired to complete the journey from his en suite back to his bed. There was the en suite, behind him, and there was the bed, in front of him, both well within view, but somehow it was impossible to move either forward or backward, only downward, onto the floor, until his body was arranged motionless on the carpet. Well, here I am on the floor, he thought. Is life so much worse here than it would be on the bed, or even in a totally different location? No, life is exactly the same. Life is the thing you bring with you inside your own head. I might as well be lying here, breathing the vile dust of the carpet into my lungs, gradually feeling my right arm go numb under the weight of my body, because itβs essentially the same as every other possible experience.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He seemed to think Marianne had access to a range of different identities, between which she slipped effortlessly. This surprised her, because she usually felt confined inside one single personality, which was always the same regardless of what she did or said. She had tried to be different in the past, as a kind of experiment, but it had never worked. If she was different with Connell, the difference was not happening inside herself, in her personhood, but in between them, in the dynamic.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
Back home, Connellβs shyness never seemed like much of an obstacle to his social life, because everyone knew who he was already, and there was never any need to introduce himself or create impressions about his personality. If anything, his personality seemed like something external to himself, managed by the opinions of others, rather than anything he individually did or produced. Now he has a sense of invisibility, nothingness, with no reputation to recommend him to anyone.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)
β
He knows that a lot of the literary people in college see books primarily as a way of appearing cultured. ... Connell's initial assessment of the reading was not disproven. It was culture as class performance, literature fetishized for its ability to take educated people on false emotional journeys, so that they might afterward feel superior to the uneducated people whose emotional journeys they liked to read about. Even if the writer himself was a good person, and even if his book really was insightful, all books were ultimately marketed as status symbols, and all writers participated to some degree in this marketing. Presumably this was how the industry made money. Literature, in the way it appeared at these public readings, had no potential as a form of resistance to anything. Still, Connell went home that night and read over some notes he had been making for a new story, and he felt the old beat of pleasure inside his body, like watching a perfect goal, like the rustling movement of light through leaves, a phrase of music from the window of a passing car. Life offers up these moments of joy despite everything.
β
β
Sally Rooney (Normal People)