Cy > Cy's Quotes

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  • #1
    “Life is a tragedy of nutrition”
    Arnold Ehret, Definite Cure of Chronic Constipation Also Overcoming Constipation Naturally

  • #2
    Eduardo Galeano
    “El subdesarrollo no es una etapa del desarrollo. Es su consecuencia.”
    Eduardo Galeano, Open Veins of Latin America: Five Centuries of the Pillage of a Continent

  • #3
    Jim Henson
    “[Kids] don't remember what you try to teach them. They remember what you are.”
    Jim Henson, It's Not Easy Being Green: And Other Things to Consider

  • #4
    Frantz Fanon
    “Violence is man re-creating himself. ”
    Frantz Fanon

  • #5
    Billy Corgan
    “I've always been spiritual but I've never had a proper context, and it took me a while to find the proper context. It's hard to realize you can have any kind of relationship with God you want... and so I now have a punk rock relationship with God”
    Billy Corgan

  • #6
    Audre Lorde
    “But the true feminist deals out of a lesbian consciousness whether or not she ever sleeps with women.”
    Audre Lorde

  • #7
    Jamaica Kincaid
    “The night-soil men can see a bird walking in trees. It isn't a bird. It is a woman who has removed her skin and is on her way to drink the blood of her secret enemies. It is a woman who has left her skin i a corner of a house made out of wood. It is a woman who is reasonable and admires honeybees in the hibiscus.”
    Jamaica Kincaid, At the Bottom of the River

  • #8
    Octavio Paz
    “Mineral cactai,
    quicksilver lizards in the adobe walls,
    the bird that punctures space,
    thirst, tedium, clouds of dust,
    impalpable epiphanies of wind.
    The pines taught me to talk to myself.
    In that garden I learnedto send myself off.
    Later there were no gardens. ”
    Octavio Paz, A Draft of Shadows and Other Poems

  • #9
    Edwidge Danticat
    “No, women like you don't write. They carve onion sculptures and potato statues. They sit in dark corners and braid their hair in new shapes and twists in order to control the stiffness, the unruliness, the rebelliousness.”
    Edwidge Danticat, Krik? Krak!

  • #11
    Toni Morrison
    “A dead hydrangea is as intricate and lovely as one in bloom. Bleak sky is as seductive as sunshine, miniature orange trees without blossom or fruit are not defective; they are that.”
    Toni Morrison, Tar Baby

  • #12
    Octavio Paz
    “a silent concave of puppet buffoons
    neither eagles nor jaguars
    buzzard lawyers
    locuses
    wings of ink sawing mindibles
    ventriloquist coyotes
    peddlers of shadows
    beneficent satraps
    the cacomistle thief of hens
    the monument to the Rattle and its snake
    the altar to the mauser and the machete
    the mausoleum of the epauletted cayman
    rhetoric sculpted in phrases of cement”
    Octavio Paz

  • #13
    Barbara Kingsolver
    “No other continent has endured such an unspeakably bizarre combination of foreign thievery and foreign goodwill.”
    Barbara Kingsolver, The Poisonwood Bible

  • #14
    Marcus Garvey
    “I regard the Klan, the Anglo-Saxon clubs and White American societies, as far as the Negro is concerned, as better friends of the race than all other groups of hypocritical whites put together.”
    Marcus Garvey

  • #15
    Nawal El Saadawi
    “Yet not for a single moment did I have any doubts about my own integrity and honour as a woman. I knew that my profession had been invented by men, and that men were in control of both our worlds, the one on earth, and the one in heaven. That men force women to sell their bodies at a price, and that the lowest paid body is that of a wife. All women are prostitutes of one kind or another.”
    Nawal El Saadawi, Woman at Point Zero

  • #16
    Dick Gregory
    “I personally believe breathatarianism to be the highest mode of human living [...] breathing in pure air, absorbing the direct light and energies of the sun, bathing in pure water [...] I look at the obituaries every morning and ain't nobody listed but you eaters.”
    Dick Gregory

  • #17
    Dick Gregory
    “I never learned hate at home or shame. I had to go to school for that.”
    Dick Gregory

  • #18
    Frantz Fanon
    “When we revolt it’s not for a particular culture. We revolt simply because, for many reasons, we can no longer breathe”
    Frantz Fanon

  • #19
    Zadie Smith
    “When a human being becomes a set of data on a website like Facebook, he or she is reduced. Everything shrinks. Individual character. Friendships. Language. Sensibility. In a way it’s a transcendent experience: we lose our bodies, our messy feelings, our desires, our fears.”
    Zadie Smith

  • #20
    Albert Einstein
    “I never teach my pupils, I only attempt to provide the conditions in which they can learn.”
    Albert Einstein

  • #21
    Zhuangzi
    “Rewards and punishment is the lowest form of education.”
    Chuang Tzu

  • #22
    Audre Lorde
    “The learning process is something you can incite, literally incite, like a riot.”
    Audre Lorde

  • #23
    Leo Tolstoy
    “no disease suffered by a live man can be known, for every living person has his own peculiarities and always has his own peculiar, personal, novel, complicated disease, unknown to medicine -- not a disease of the lungs, liver, skin, heart, nerves, and so on mentioned in medical books, but a disease consisting of one of the innumerable combinations of the maladies of those organs. This simple thought could not occur to the doctors (as it cannot occur to a wizard that he is unable to work his charms) because the business of their lives was to cure, and they received money for it and had spent the best years of their lives on that business. But above all that thought was kept out of their minds by the fact that they saw they were really useful [...] Their usefulness did not depend on making the patient swallow substances for the most part harmful (the harm was scarcely perceptible because they were given in small doses) but they were useful, necessary, and indispensable because they satisfied a mental need of the invalid and those who loved her -- and that is why there are, and always will be, pseudo-healers, wise women, homoeopaths, and allopaths. They satisfied that eternal human need for hope of relief, for sympathy, and that something should be done, which is felt by those who are suffering.”
    Leo Tolstoy

  • #24
    Jane Jacobs
    “...frequent streets and short blocks are valuable because of the fabric of intricate cross-use that they permit among the users of a city neighbouhood.”
    Jane Jacobs, The Death and Life of Great American Cities

  • #25
    Jane Jacobs
    “A city street equipped to handle strangers, and to make a safety asset, in itself, our of the presence of strangers, as the streets of successful city neighborhoods always do, must have three main qualities:

    First, there must be a clear demarcation between what is public space and what is private space. Public and private spaces cannot ooze into each other as they do typically in suburban settings or in projects.

    Second, there must be eyes upon the street, eyes belonging to those we might call the natural proprietors of the street. The buildings on a street equipped to handle strangers and to insure the safety of both residents and strangers, must be oriented to the street. They cannot turn their backs or blank sides on it and leave it blind.

    And third, the sidewalk must have users on it fairly continuously, both to add to the number of effective eyes on the street and to induce the people in buildings along the street to watch the sidewalks in sufficient numbers. Nobody enjoys sitting on a stoop or looking out a window at an empty street. Almost nobody does such a thing. Large numbers of people entertain themselves, off and on, by watching street activity.”
    Jane Jacobs, The Death and Life of Great American Cities

  • #26
    Keri Hulme
    “A family can be the bane of one's existence. A family can also be most of the meaning of one's existence. I don't know whether my family is bane or meaning, but they have surely gone away and left a large hole in my heart.”
    Keri Hulme, The Bone People

  • #27
    Susan Sontag
    “A capitalist society requires a culture based on images. It needs to furnish vast amounts of entertainment in order to stimulate buying and anesthetise the injuries of class, race, and sex. And it needs to gather unlimited amounts of information, the better to exploit natural resources, increase productivity, keep order, make war, give jobs to bureaucrats. The camera's twin capacities, to subjectivise reality and to objectify it, ideally serve these needs as strengthen them. Cameras define reality in the two ways essential to the workings of an advanced industrial society: as a spectacle (for masses) and as an object of surveillance (for rulers). The production of images also furnishes a ruling ideology. Social change is replaced by a change in images. The freedom to consume a plurality of images and goods is equated with freedom itself. The narrowing of free political choice to free economic consumption requires the unlimited production and consumption of images.”
    Susan Sontag, On Photography

  • #28
    Sun Ra
    “In some far off place, many light years in space, I’ll wait for you. Where human feet have never trod, where human eyes have never seen. I’ll build a world of abstract dreams and wait for you.”
    Sun Ra

  • #29
    Joy Harjo
    “Our physical living is held together by plant sacrifice. We eat, wear, and are sheltered by plants and plant material. Nearly all of our medicines are plant-derived. We need to take time with them, get to know them. It’s as one of the elders from a nearby pueblo told me once when she came to visit. She admired the two aloe vera plants who took up a large part of the living room as they basked in the sunlight filtered through the skylight. They loved her attention. ‘These are the knowledge bearers. They are the ones we need to be listening to, not your computer, your internet that is pulling you into a world that will never feed you, only make you hungrier,’ she told me.

    ~Joy Harjo, from Poet Warrior”
    Joy Harjo, Poet Warrior



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