Erica > Erica's Quotes

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  • #1
    Albert Camus
    “A man wants to earn money in order to be happy, and his whole effort and the best of a life are devoted to the earning of that money. Happiness is forgotten; the means are taken for the end.”
    Albert Camus, The Myth of Sisyphus and Other Essays

  • #2
    Jeanette Winterson
    “Pursuing happiness, and I did, and I still do, is not at all the same as being happy--which I think is fleeting, dependent on circumstances...If the sun is shining, stand in it---yes, yes, yes. Happy times are great, but happy times pass--they have to because time passes. The pursuit of happiness is more elusive; it is life-long, and it is not goal-centered. What you are pursuing is meaning--- a meaningful life. There's the hap-- the fate, the draw that is yours, and it isn't fixed, but changing the course of the stream, or dealing new cards, whatever metaphor you want to use---that's going to take a lot of energy. There are times when it will go so wrong that you will barely be alive, and times when you realise that being barely alive, on your own terms, is better than living a bloated half-life on someone else's terms. The pursuit isn't all or nothing--- it's all AND nothing.”
    Jeanette Winterson

  • #3
    Ayn Rand
    “We are on strike, we, the men of the mind.

    We are on strike against self-immolation. We are on strike against the creed of unearned rewards and unrewarded duties. We are on strike against the dogma that the pursuit of one's happiness is evil. We are on strike against the doctrine that life is guilt.”
    Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged

  • #4
    Ayn Rand
    “Thinking is man’s only basic virtue, from which all the others proceed. And his basic vice, the source of all his evils, is that nameless act which all of you practice, but struggle never to admit: the act of blanking out, the willful suspension of one’s consciousness, the refusal to think - not blindness, but the refusal to see; not ignorance, but the refusal to know. It is the act of unfocusing your mind and inducing an inner fog to escape the responsibility of judgment - on the unstated premise that a thing will not exist if only you refuse to identify it, that A will not be A so long as you do not pronounce the verdict ‘It is.”
    Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged

  • #5
    Ayn Rand
    “Independence is the recognition of the fact that yours is the responsibility of judgment and nothing can help you escape it—that no substitute can do your thinking—that the vilest form of self-abasement and self-destruction is the subordination of your mind to the mind of another, the acceptance of an authority over your brain, the acceptance of his assertions as facts, his say-so as truth, his edicts as middle-man between your consciousness and your existence.”
    Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged

  • #6
    “It's not finding yourself that's hard; it's facing yourself that is.”
    Alexander Den Heijer, Nothing You Don't Already Know

  • #7
    “You often feel tired, not because you've done too much, but because you've done too little of what sparks a light in you.”
    Alexander Den Heijer, Nothing You Don't Already Know

  • #8
    “When a flower doesn’t bloom, you fix the environment in which it grows, not the flower.”
    Alexander Den Heijer



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