Katy B > Katy's Quotes

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  • #1
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Bravery is being unafraid of something other people are afraid of. Courage is being afraid, but strong enough to do it anyway.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #2
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “In all of her time spent watching others, she hadn't picked up on this part of falling in love, that someone could look at you as if you were the very center of everything. And even though you knew better, you'd allow yourself a moment to believe you were worthy of being revolved around, too.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #3
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “You make my life worth something. And I can promise you with my entire body that you will never be alone. Every day, you can wake up and go to bed knowing there is someone whose heart is bursting, barely able to contain how much they love you. I know you’re my niece, Frances. But you have always, too, been mine.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #4
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Because the world had decided that to be soft was to be weak, even though in Joan’s experience being soft and flexible was always more durable than being hard and brittle. Admitting you were afraid always took more guts than pretending you weren’t. Being willing to make a mistake got you further than never trying. The world had decided that to be fallible was weak. But we are all fallible. The strong ones are the ones who accept it.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #5
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Listen to me,” Joan said. “I was circling two hundred miles above the Earth, and all I wanted was to get home and see you. Do you understand that? Do you understand that I don’t care how big or small this world is, that you are the center of mine? Do you understand that, to someone, you are everything that matters on this entire planet?”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #6
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Well, we are the stars", Joan said. "And the stars are us. Every atom in our bodies was once out there. Was once a part of them. To look at the night sky is to look at pars of who you once were, who you may one day be.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #7
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Happiness is so hard to come by. I don't understand why anyone would begrudge anyone else for managing to find some of it.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #8
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “I feel like I could know you forever and still be curious about what you're going to say next.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere
    tags: love

  • #9
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Just the act of falling in love was to agree to a broken heart.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #10
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “If you’re in bed next to me, I will take your hand. If you are not, I will go find you. I will spend the rest of my life, if I get that lucky, seeking you out. Not because I promised you or because you’re there. But because I will want to. I will want to be beside you. Every day. Forever.” “You will?” Vanessa tucked a strand of Joan’s hair behind her ear. “Every morning, I wake up and I think, ‘God, yes, her.’ ” Joan smiled and dried her tears. “If that can be enough for you,” Vanessa said, “it’s yours until the day I die.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #11
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Vanessa smiled. “I’m not nervous, no.” Joan’s cheeks started to burn. “I’m excited,” Vanessa said, closing the gap between them. “I want to take you everywhere. And do everything with you. And ask you every single question that’s been on my mind for months. And I want to know when you knew what was happening between us and I want to tell you when I knew. And I want to hold your hand in a quiet corner and I want to lie in bed and hear your heartbeat through your chest. I want to bring you coffee in bed. And I want to hear you tell me anything you’ve always wanted to tell someone. Because you know that you’ve met someone who desperately wants to listen.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #12
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “But to love Frances was to be always saying goodbye to the girl Frances used to be and falling in love again with the girl Frances was becoming.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #13
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “But I think it is also the relief I feel that those stars are immovable. Nothing you or I could do will ever alter them. They are so much bigger than us. And they will not change within our lifetime. We can succeed or fail, get it right or get it wrong, love and lose the ones we love, and still the Summer Triangle will point south. And in that way, I know everything will be some type of okay—as impossible as that can seem sometimes.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere
    tags: stars

  • #14
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “I want to spend my energy thinking not of how my actions might be frowned upon by a man in the sky, but how my actions affect every living and non-living thing around me. Life is God. My life is tied to yours, and to everyone’s on this planet. How does that not instantly make us more in debt to one another? And also offer us the comfort that we are not alone?”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #15
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Look,” Vanessa said, pointing up toward the western edge of the sky. “Hercules.” Joan did not speak. “The whole sky makes sense to me now,” Vanessa said. “Because of you.” And Joan thought, Oh no. Oh no. Oh no. Oh no.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere
    tags: sky

  • #16
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “But as Joan had taken each small step forward, the world had kept spinning on its axis. Days had formed into weeks and months and years, which people marked with watches and calendars, all based on the only thing they had to tell what time it was: the stars. As the Earth orbits the sun, it shifts toward the sun’s warm embrace. Then summer turns to fall, fall to winter. Soon it loops back around, and winter thaws to spring, spring to summer. Through it all, babies are born from stardust and grow taller. They begin to walk and talk and learn the days of the week, the months, the seasons. Then they look up at the sky, to see where they came from. And the adults spend most of their days looking down. They fall in love and make mistakes and learn new things and feel tired. They lose people they love, and fail themselves, and change or never change. They get new jobs and fall out of love and convince themselves that if they just get this one thing, they will finally be happy. Day in and day out, the Earth keeps spinning and revolving and sailing through the Milky Way. That is why time never stands still.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #17
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Being human was such a lonely endeavor.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #18
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “I will never be Jimmy,” Joan said. “Or Marty. Or Teddy. I don’t want to tell jokes at other people’s expense, and pretend I’m never afraid, and refuse to ask for help. I don’t want to hold in how I feel, or hide it if I’ve been hurt, or try to prove to anyone that I don’t cry. Because I do cry sometimes.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #19
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “The trees need our breath, and our breath needs the trees,” she continued. “As scientists we call that symbiosis, and it is a consequence of evolution. But the natural consequences of our connections to each other—that’s God, to me. I believe in it because I can see it with my own eyes. I know it exists. But I also believe in it because I want to believe in it. I want to spend my energy thinking not of how my actions might be frowned upon by a man in the sky, but how my actions affect every living and non-living thing around me. Life is God. My life is tied to yours, and to everyone’s on this planet. How does that not instantly make us more in debt to one another? And also offer us the comfort that we are not alone?”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #20
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “my mom said that if I was going to be proud of myself for being generous, that I had to do it even when it meant I might lose something. She said, ‘You have to have something on the line, for it to be called character.’ ”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #21
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “I knew you knew. I knew you knew it even better than me. For so long, almost no one understood how I’ve felt. Why I wanted to do this. I mean, they were impressed, don’t get me wrong. But trying to explain that fire I feel to leave the planet, the one you’re talking about? It is like trying to describe the color blue to someone who has never seen it. And then you come along and it’s like you are describing the color blue to me and I feel such . . . relief. I’d have followed you anywhere just for that.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #22
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Joan was always curious what it was like on the inside of a marriage. What happened when it was just the two of them at home, Duke and Kris? Did she have to ask him for permission to buy new clothes? Did he sometimes tell her he didn’t like what she made for dinner? Joan tried to ward off the sadness that always came when she pictured a marriage—any marriage. Her parents’ marriage seemed fine to her. Good, even. They still loved each other. Her mother, basically a vegetarian, made her father’s favorite meatloaf most weekends with a joy that Joan had scrutinized for years but found completely sincere. Still, when she thought about it, a gloom dared to take over. You could develop your personality your entire life—pursue the things you wanted to learn, discover the most interesting parts of yourself, hold yourself to a certain standard—and then you marry a man and suddenly his personality, his wants, his standards subsume your own? Joan knew that society was changing and some men were changing with it. Some of them now understood that a woman’s career, her life, her passions were just as important as their own. But still, all Joan could think was that it was now just two people cutting off parts of themselves to make themselves fit together. A world of vegetarians cooking meatloaf.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #23
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Do you know why I kept saying the best song was ‘Space Oddity’?” Vanessa asks. “Because of your favorite part.” “When he says, ‘Tell my wife I love her very much…”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #24
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Space belonged to no one, but Earth belonged to all of them.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #25
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Don’t kill my dream. Let me think you’re the best astronaut in the class. Can you give me that? Let me think that right now, the wrong woman won, okay? Let the world be as I see it for just tonight. Without too many gray areas and caveats. Where I know I’m mortal but I’m not sure that you’re not a god”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #26
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “How entirely undemanding of yourself it was to believe that everything happened to you. And everything was about you. And that your feelings were the only ones that mattered. Worse yet, to afford yourself the role of the victim always—regardless of how grotesquely it required you to twist reality—so that you never had to look in the mirror and admit you were the perpetrator.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #27
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “You are what you are, and I like what you are. Anyway, nobody is one thing all the time.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #28
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “It felt so good to Joan, to hurt to leave her.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #29
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “Joan did not believe there were gods up there, but she did believe that God was there. Was everywhere. The wonder of the night sky was as good a place to connect with it as the smell of a grapefruit or the warmth of a pocket of sun. “Of course we look for the gods there,” Vanessa said. “And if we make it up there, we’re going to have to fight against that sneaking suspicion that we might just be gods ourselves.” If Joan could have been pressed harder into the Earth, if gravity was variable, this would have flattened her.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere

  • #30
    Taylor Jenkins Reid
    “So it came as a huge shock to the men in the department, many of whom fancied themselves secretly destined for victory, to see that the woman they’d overlooked was lapping them in a race they did not know had started.”
    Taylor Jenkins Reid, Atmosphere



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