Anne Lamott (April 10, 1954 -) Our lives and humanity are untidy: disorganized and careworn. Life on earth is often a raunchy and violent experience. It can be agony just to get through the day. And yet, I do believe there is ultimately meaning in the chaos, and also in the doldrums. What I resist …
Jeanine Michna-Bales On Woman ‘s Suffrage
Jeanine Michna-Bales The suffrage movement was really born out of the antislavery movement. It hit home that for a very long time ‘democracy’ only applied to certain people — white men. Please remember this when you Vote on November 03, 2020. Thank you.
Anne Elizabeth Applebaum On Lies And Liars
Anne Elizabeth Applebaum (July 25, 1964 -) Sometimes the point isn’t to make people believe a lie – it’s to make people fear the liar. Please remember this when you Vote on November 03, 2020. Thank you.
Ann Proulx On Writing
Edna Ann Proulx (August 22, 1935 -) You should write because you love the shape of stories and sentences and the creation of different worlds on a page. Writing comes from reading, and reading is the finest teacher of how to write.
May Sarton On What I Think
May Sarton (May 3, 1912 – July 16, 1995) For a long time now, every meeting with another human being has been a collision. I feel too much, sense too much, am exhausted by the reverberations after even the simplest conversation. But the deep collision is and has been with my unregenerate, tormenting, and tormented …
John Ashbery On Poetry
John Lawrence Ashbery (July 28, 1927 – September 3, 2017) I don't find any direct statements in life. My poetry imitates or reproduces the way knowledge or awareness come to me, which is by fits and starts and by indirection. I don't think poetry arranged in neat patterns would reflect that situation. My poetry is …
James Baldwin On 4 AM
James Baldwin(August 2, 1924 – December 1, 1987) Four AM can be a devastating hour. The day, no matter what kind of day it was is indisputably over; almost instantaneously, a new day begins: and how will one bear it? Probably no better than one bore the day that is ending, possibly not as well. …
Brian Greene On Purpose
Brian Greene (February 09, 1963 -) When you recognize that we are the product of purposeless, mindless laws of physics playing themselves out on our particles — because we are, all, bags of particles — it changes the way you search for meaning and purpose: You recognize that looking out to the cosmos to find …
Etel Adnan On The Future
Etel Adnan (February 24, 1925 -) When you realize you are mortal you also realize the tremendousness of the future. You fall in love with a Time you will never perceive.
Frederick Douglass On Truth
Frederick Douglass (February 01, 1818–February 20, 1895) I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of others, rather than to be false, and incur my own abhorrence. From my earliest recollection, I date the entertainment of a deep conviction that slavery would not always be able to hold …
Walt Whitman On Living Your Life
Walt Whitman (May 31, 1819 – March 26, 1892) This is what you shall do; Love the earth and sun and the animals, despise riches, give alms to every one that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and …
Alain Badiou On Love
Alain Badiou (January 17, 1937 -) Love… is a quest for truth… truth in relation to something quite precise: what kind of world does one see when one experiences it from the point of view of two and not one? What is the world like when it is experienced, developed and lived from the point …
Edward Hirsch On Reading Poetry
Edward M Hirsch (January 20, 1950 -) Read these poems to yourself in the middle of the night. Turn on a single lamp and read the poem while you’re alone in an otherwise dark room or while someone else sleeps next to you. Read them whem you’re wide awake in the early morning, fully alert. …
Anne Frank On Courage
Annelies Marie (Anne) Frank (June 12, 1929 – February or March 1945) In spite of everything, I still believe that people are really good at heart. I simply can’t build up my hopes on a foundation consisting of confusion, misery, and death. I see the world gradually being turned into a wilderness, I hear the …
Dorothea Lange On Photography
Dorothea Lange (May 26, 1895 – October 11, 1965) One should really use the camera as though tomorrow you’d be stricken blind. To live a visual life is an enormous undertaking, practically unattainable. I have only touched it, just touched it.
Huston Smith On Religion
Huston Cummings Smith (May 31, 1919 – December 30, 2016) The fact that all the enduring traditions make the same claim on this point, and the claim being that everything proceeds from an absolute perfection. Now, let me pause on that. You know, the Taoists, the Tao -there is a being, wondrous, perfect, how quiet …
Christopher Eric Hitchens On Death
Christopher Eric Hitchens (April 13, 1949 – December 15, 2011) I personally want to ‘do’ death in the active and not the passive and to be there to look it in the eye and be doing something when it comes for me.
Leonard Michaels On Cats And Loneliness
Leonard Michaels (January 2, 1933–May 10, 2003) When it comes to loneliness, a cat is excellent company. It is a lonely animal. It understands what you feel. A dog also understands, but it makes such a big deal of being there for you, bumping against you, flopping about your feet, licking your face. It keeps …
Eudora Welty On Life
Eudora Alice Welty (April 13, 1909 – July 23, 2001) I am a writer who came of a sheltered life. A sheltered life can be a daring life as well. For all serious daring starts from within.
Gabriel García Márquez On Journalism
Gabriel García Márquez (March 06, 1927 – April 17, 2014) I learned a lot from James Joyce and Erskine Caldwell and of course from Hemingway ... [but the] tricks you need to transform something which appears fantastic, unbelievable into something plausible, credible, those I learned from journalism. The key is to tell it straight. It …
David Lynch On Ideas
David Lynch (January 20, 1946 -) Ideas are like fish. If you want to catch little fish, you can stay in the shallow water. But if you want to catch the big fish, you’ve got to go deeper. Down deep, the fish are more powerful and more pure. They’re huge and abstract. And they’re very …
Lewis Thomas On The Earth
Lewis Thomas (November 25, 1913 – December 3, 1993) At this early stage in our evolution, now through our infancy and into our childhood and then, with luck, our growing up, what our species needs most of all, right now, is simply a future.
Gilda Radner On Life
Gilda Susan Radner (June 28, 1946 – May 20, 1989) It is so hard for us little human beings to accept this deal that we get. It's really crazy, isn't it? We get to live, then we have to die. What we put into every moment is all we have. … What spirit human beings …
Irving Kristol On Equal Distribution
Irving Kristol (January 22, 1920 – September 18, 2009) In the same way as men cannot for long tolerate a sense of spiritual meaninglessness in their individual lives, so they cannot for long accept a society in which power, privilege, and property are not distributed according to some morally meaningful criteria.
Oswald Spengler On Freedom
Oswald Manuel Arnold Gottfried Spengler (May 29, 1880 – May 08, 1936) The press to-day is an army with carefully organized arms and branches, with journalists as officers, and readers as soldiers. But here, as in every army, the soldier obeys blindly, and war-aims and operation-plans change without his knowledge. The reader neither knows, nor …
Erich Fromm On Hope
Erich Fromm (March 23, 1900–March 18, 1980) Hope is a decisive element in any attempt to bring about social change in the direction of greater aliveness, awareness, and reason. But the nature of hope is often misunderstood and confused with attitudes that have nothing to do with hope and in fact are the very opposite….Man, …
Louise Glück On Writing
Louise Glück (April 22, 1943 -) The fantasy exists that once certain hurdles have been gotten through, this art turns much simpler, that inspiration never falters, and public opinion is always affirmative, and there's no struggle, there's no torment, there's no sense that the thing you've embarked on is a catastrophe.
Iris Murdoch On Happiness
Iris Murdoch (July 15, 1919 – February 08, 1999) Happiness is a matter of one's most ordinary everyday mode of consciousness being busy and lively and unconcerned with self. To be damned is for one's ordinary everyday mode of consciousness to be unremitting agonizing preoccupation with self.
Franz Kafka On Books
Franz Kafka (July 03, 1883 – June 03, 1924) The books we need are of the kind that act upon us like a misfortune, that make us suffer like the death of someone we love more than ourselves, that make us feel as though we were on the verge of suicide, or lost in a …
Virginia Woolf On Reading And Mind
Adeline Virginia Woolf (January 25, 1882 – March 28, 1941) I read a great deal… Besides this I write… But the books are the things that I enjoy — on the whole — most. I feel sometimes for hours together as though the physical stuff of my brain were expanding, larger & larger, throbbing quicker …
Anaïs Nin On Friends
Anaïs Nin (February 21, 1903 – January 14, 1977) Each friend represents a world in us possibly not born until they arrive, and it is only by this meeting that a new world is born.