Kate > Kate's Quotes

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  • #1
    Neil Gaiman
    “Beware of Doors.”
    Neil Gaiman, Neverwhere

  • #2
    Angela Carter
    “They had imagined too often and too much and so they had exhausted all their possibilities. When they embraced each other’s phantoms, each in his separate privacy has savoured the most refined of pleasures but, connoisseurs of unreality as they were, they could not bear the crude weight, the rank smell and the ripe taste of real flesh. It is always a dangerous experiment to act out a fantasy; they had undertaken the experiment rashly and had failed…”
    Angela Carter, Love
    tags: love, sex

  • #3
    J.K. Rowling
    “You must accept the reality of other people. You think that reality is up for negotiation, that we think it's whatever you say it is. You must accept that we are as real as you are; you must accept that you are not God.”
    J.K. Rowling, The Casual Vacancy

  • #4
    Carson McCullers
    “And the curt truth is that, in a deep secret way, the state of being loved is intolerable to many.”
    Carson McCullers, The Ballad of the Sad Café and Other Stories

  • #5
    The closest thing to being cared for is to care for someone else.
    “The closest thing to being cared for is to care for someone else.”
    Carson McCullers, The Square Root of Wonderful

  • #6
    Carson McCullers
    “All we can do is go around telling the truth.”
    Carson McCullers, The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter

  • #7
    Carson McCullers
    “People felt themselves watching him even before they knew that there was anything different about him. His eyes made a person think that he heard things that no one else had ever heard, that he knew things no one had ever guessed before. He did not seem quite human.”
    Carson McCullers, The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter

  • #8
    Carson McCullers
    “Owing to the fact he was a mute they were able to give him all the qualities they wanted him to have.”
    Carson McCullers, The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter

  • #9
    Carson McCullers
    “There are the lover and the beloved, but these two come from different countries.”
    Carson McCullers, The Ballad of the Sad Café and Other Stories

  • #10
    Carson McCullers
    “She was at the age when she looked as much like an overgrown boy as a girl. And on that subject why was it that the smartest people mostly missed that point? By nature all people are of both sexes. So that marriage and the bed is not all by any means. The proof? Real youth and old age. Because often old men's voices grow high and reedy and the take on a mincing walk. And old women sometimes grow fat and their voices get rough and deep and the grow dark little mustaches.”
    Carson McCullers, The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter

  • #11
    F. Scott Fitzgerald
    “Good manners are an admission that everybody is so tender that they have to be handled with gloves. Now, human respect—you don't call a man a coward or a liar lightly, but if you spend your life sparing people's feelings and feeding their vanity, you get so you can't distinguish what should be respected in them.”
    F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tender Is the Night

  • #12
    F. Scott Fitzgerald
    “Most people think everybody feels about them much more violently than they actually do; they think other people's opinions of them swing through great arcs of approval or disapproval.”
    F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tender Is the Night

  • #13
    Susie Orbach
    “For a young woman today, developing femininity successfully requires meeting three basic demands. The first of these is that she must defer to others, the second that she must anticipate and meet the needs of others, and the third, that she must seek self-definition through connection with another. The consequences of these requirements frequently mean that in denying themselves, women are unable to develop an authentic sense of their needs or a feeling of entitlement for their desires. Preoccupied with others' experience and unfamiliar with their own needs, women come to depend on the approval of those to whom they give. The imperative of affiliation, the culture demand that a woman must define herself through association with another, means that many aspects of self are under-developed, producing insecurity and a shaky sense of self. Under the competent carer who gives to the world lives a hungry, deprived and needy little girl who is unsure and ashamed of her desires and wants.”
    Susie Orbach, Hunger Strike: Starving Amidst Plenty

  • #14
    Susie Orbach
    “I thought of the analyst Winnicott's observation: 'It is a joy to be hidden but disaster not to be found'.”
    Susie Orbach, The Impossibility of Sex: Stories of the Intimate Relationship between Therapist and Patient



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