Karen Blanco > Karen 's Quotes

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  • #1
    Marguerite Duras
    “Très vite dans ma vie il a été trop tard.”
    Marguerite Duras, The Lover

  • #2
    Tara Westover
    “My life was narrated for me by others. Their voices were forceful, emphatic, absolute. It had never occurred to me that my voice might be as strong as theirs.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #3
    Tara Westover
    “You can love someone and still choose to say goodbye to them,” she says now. “You can miss a person every day, and still be glad that they are no longer in your life.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #4
    Tara Westover
    “We are all of us more complicated than the roles we are assigned in the stories other people tell”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #5
    Tara Westover
    “Everything I had worked for, all my years of study, had been to purchase for myself this one privilege: to see and experience more truths than those given to me by my father, and to use those truths to construct my own mind. I had come to believe that the ability to evaluate many ideas, many histories, many points of view, was at the heart of what it means to self-create. If I yielded now, I would lose more than an argument. I would lose custody of my own mind. This was the price I was being asked to pay, I understood that now. What my father wanted to cast from me wasn’t a demon: it was me.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #6
    Tara Westover
    “I began to experience the most powerful advantage of money: the ability to think of things besides money.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #7
    Tara Westover
    “Curiosity is a luxury for the financially secure.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #8
    Tara Westover
    “To admit uncertainty is to admit to weakness, to powerlessness, and to believe in yourself despite both. It is a frailty, but in this frailty there is a strength: the conviction to live in your own mind, and not in someone else’s.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #9
    Tara Westover
    “I am not the child my father raised, but he is the father who raised her.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #10
    Tara Westover
    “I carried the books to my room and read through the night. I loved the fiery pages of Mary Wollstonecraft, but there was a single line written by John Stuart Mill that, when I read it, moved the world: "It is a subject on which nothing final can be known." The subject Mill had in mind was the nature of women. Mill claimed that women have been coaxed, cajoled, shoved and squashed into a series of feminine contortions for so many centuries, that it is now quite impossible to define their natural abilities or aspirations.

    Blood rushed to my brain; I felt an animating surge of adrenaline, of possibility, of a frontier being pushed outward. Of the nature of women, nothing final can be known. Never had I found such comfort in a void, in the black absence of knowledge. It seemed to say: whatever you are, you are woman.”
    Tara Westover, Educated

  • #11
    Tara Westover
    “He said positive liberty is self-mastery—the rule of the self, by the self. To have positive liberty, he explained, is to take control of one’s own mind; to be liberated from irrational fears and beliefs, from addictions, superstitions and all other forms of self-coercion.”
    Tara Westover, Educated



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