Aleya > Aleya's Quotes

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  • #1
    Bernardine Evaristo
    “privilege is about context and circumstance”
    Bernardine Evaristo, Girl, Woman, Other

  • #2
    James Baldwin
    “Tell me, he said, "What is this thing about time? Why is it better to be late than early? People are always saying, we must wait, we must wait. what are they waiting for?"

    "Well […] I guess people wait in order to make sure of what they feel."

    "And when you have waited—-has it made you sure?”
    James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room

  • #3
    James Baldwin
    “With everything in me screaming No! yet the sum of me sighed Yes.”
    James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room

  • #4
    James Baldwin
    “I was guilty and irritated and full of love and pain. I wanted to kick him and I wanted to take him in my arms.”
    James Baldwin, Giovanni’s Room

  • #5
    Yaa Gyasi
    “It took me many years to realize that it’s hard to live in this world. I don’t mean the mechanics of living, because for most of us, our hearts will beat, our lungs will take in oxygen, without us doing anything at all to tell them to. For most of us, mechanically, physically, it’s harder to die than it is to live. But still we try to die. We drive too fast down winding roads, we have sex with strangers without wearing protection, we drink, we use drugs. We try to squeeze a little more life out of our lives. It’s natural to want to do that. But to be alive in the world, every day, as we are given more and more and more, as the nature of “what we can handle” changes and our methods for how we handle it change, too, that’s something of a miracle.”
    Yaa Gyasi, Transcendent Kingdom

  • #6
    Yaa Gyasi
    “We read the Bible how we want to read it. It doesn't change, but we do.”
    Yaa Gyasi, Transcendent Kingdom

  • #7
    Yaa Gyasi
    “Anytime I talk about my work informally, I inevitably encounter someone who wants to know why addicts become addicts. They use words like “will” and “choice,” and they end by saying, “Don’t you think there’s more to it than the brain?” They are skeptical of the rhetoric of addiction as disease, something akin to high blood pressure or diabetes, and I get that. What they’re really saying is that they may have partied in high school and college but look at them now. Look how strong-willed they are, how many good choices they’ve made. They want reassurances. They want to believe that they have been loved enough and have raised their children well enough that the things that I research will never, ever touch their own lives.

    I understand this impulse. I, too, have spent years creating my little moat of good deeds in an attempt to protect the castle of myself. I don’t want to be dismissed the way that Nana was once dismissed. I know that it’s easier to say Their kind does seem to have a taste for drugs, easier to write all addicts off as bad and weak-willed people, than it is to look closely at the nature of their suffering. I do it too, sometimes. I judge. I walk around with my chest puffed out, making sure hat everyone knows about my Harvard and Stanford degrees, as if those things encapsulate me, and when I do so, I give in to the same facile, lazy thinking that characterizes those who think of addicts as horrible people. It’s just that I’m standing on the other side of the moat. What I can say for certain is that there is no case study in the world that could capture the whole animal of my brother, that could show how smart and kind and generous he was, how much he wanted to get better, how much he wanted to live. Forget for a moment what he looked like on paper, and instead see him as he was in all of his glory, in all of his beauty. It’s true that for years before he died, I would look at his face and think, What a pity, what a waste. But the waste was my own, the waste was what I missed out on whenever I looked at him and saw just his addiction.”
    Yaa Gyasi, Transcendent Kingdom

  • #8
    Yaa Gyasi
    “Whenever I listened to his friends speak about issues like prison reform, climate change, the opioid epidemic, in the simultaneously intelligent but utterly vacuous way of people who think it's important simply to weigh in, to have an opinion, I would bristle. I would think, What is the point of all of this talk? What problems do we solve by identifying problems, circling them?”
    Yaa Gyasi, Transcendent Kingdom

  • #9
    Yaa Gyasi
    “In just that short amount of time, Nana’s addiction had become the sun around which all of our lives revolved. I didn’t want to stare directly at it.”
    Yaa Gyasi, Transcendent Kingdom



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