Saltwater Soul Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Saltwater Soul. Here they are! All 8 of them:

disbelief in magic can force a poor soul into believing in government and business.
Jaimal Yogis (Saltwater Buddha: A Surfer's Quest to Find Zen on the Sea)
Our souls are salt-water cured. - Liz Talbot, Lowcountry Boil.
Susan M. Boyer (Lowcountry Boil (A Liz Talbot Mystery, #1))
His hand that's wrapped in my hair angles my head back even more, and then he kisses me with confidence. It’s slow and deep, like he might not survive if he doesn’t swallow a little bit of my soul in this kiss. He tastes like saltwater and my blood feels like the sea, raging and crashing through my veins. I want to live in this feeling. Sleep in it. Wake up in it.
Colleen Hoover (Heart Bones)
I have left so many tears at the ocean that I started to wonder if that is why it is saltwater. Is the ocean filled with tears of all the people who sit on the coastline and spill their heart and soul out into the unknown?
Jennae Cecelia (Losing Myself Brought Me Here)
Aubade to Langston" When the light wakes & finds again the music of brooms in Mexico, when daylight pulls our hands from grief, & hearts cleaned raw with sawdust & saltwater flood their dazzling vessels, when the catfish in the river raise their eyelids towards your face, when sweetgrass bends in waves across battlefields where sweat & sugar marry, when we hear our people wearing tongues fine with plain greeting: How You Doing, Good Morning when I pour coffee & remember my mother’s love of buttered grits, when the trains far away in memory begin to turn their engines toward a deep past of knowing, when all I want to do is burn my masks, when I see a woman walking down the street holding her mind like a leather belt, when I pluck a blues note for my lazy shadow & cast its soul from my page, when I see God’s eyes looking up at black folks flying between moonlight & museum, when I see a good-looking people who are my truest poetry, when I pick up this pencil like a flute & blow myself away from my death, I listen to you again beneath the mercy of a blue morning’s grammar. Originally published in the Southern Humanities Review, Vol. 49.3
Rachel Eliza Griffiths
I had a dream you died, it was so horrible, it was worse than anything, I don't want you to go, please don't leave me, I can't bear being alive without you, I just want our souls to fly around forever and have adventures together. She cries raw as a child, sliming Isidol's toes with hot saltwater and mucus. Isidol starts crying too. She sinks to the floor and holds Vellus so tight and their hair tangles together in the smear of their faces. For days after, when Isidol is sleeping, Vellus will listen to see if she's still breathing. When Isidol goes outside, she will go with her, no matter how she feels, and hold her arm tightly. It was so hard, she sobs. I was alone for so long.
Porpentine Charity Heartscape (PSYCHO NYMPH EXILE)
If, in a free-association exercise someone says to me “saltwater crocodile” my first thought isn’t evil man-eating beast from the pits of hell (Australia), it’s reptile. It’s reptile, then crocodilian, then evil man-eating beast and so forth. And even as I say the last I don’t think of it as a true classification. I’m aware that instinctive emotion is over-ruling the logic behind my organisational impulse.
Octavia Cade (Food and Horror: Essays on Ravenous Souls, Toothsome Monsters, and Vicious Cravings)
Air travel has made it possible to travel vast distances in no time at all. We fly so we can get to places more quickly, and waste less time. Yet, we often don't honour the passage of that time or respect the other costs of that rapid transition from one environment to the next. I didn't allow time to "unpack" the tension and stress my body must have carried as a result of the travel, not to mention the terrible stress it put on the environment. I realized so much of my life was driven by a "make it happen" attitude; that belief that anything is possible if you put your mind to it. And yet, my father constantly reminds me, "You can do anything you want. But you can't do everything." There is a cost. It takes energy. Be that fossil fuels, calories or our soul-connection. In some indigenous cultures there is a belief that you need to allow time for your soul to catch up with your physical body after long journeys, so it's important to rest when you arrive and travel more slowly during the journey itself, taking time to pause, wait, rest.
Easkey Britton (Saltwater in the Blood: Surfing, Natural Cycles and the Sea's Power to Heal)