Bina > Bina's Quotes

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  • #1
    Mother Teresa
    “If you judge people, you have no time to love them.”
    Mother Teresa

  • #2
    Mother Teresa
    “At the end of life we will not be judged by how many diplomas we have received, how much money we have made, how many great things we have done.
    We will be judged by "I was hungry, and you gave me something to eat, I was naked and you clothed me. I was homeless, and you took me in.”
    Mother Teresa

  • #3
    Alexander Pushkin
    “I loved you: and, it may be, from my soul
    The former love has never gone away,
    But let it not recall to you my dole;
    I wish not sadden you in any way.

    I loved you silently, without hope, fully,
    In diffidence, in jealousy, in pain;
    I loved you so tenderly and truly,
    As let you else be loved by any man. ”
    Alexander Pushkin

  • #4
    Gertrude Stein
    “We are always the same age inside. ”
    Gertrude Stein

  • #5
    Gertrude Stein
    “One must dare to be happy. ”
    Gertrude Stein

  • #6
    Gertrude Stein
    “In the morning there is meaning, in the evening there is feeling.”
    Gertrude Stein, Tender Buttons
    tags: life

  • #7
    Gertrude Stein
    “There ain't no answer.
    There ain't gonna be any answer.
    There never has been an answer.
    There's your answer.”
    Gertrude Stein

  • #8
    Gertrude Stein
    “Why should a sequence of words be anything but a pleasure?”
    Gertrude Stein

  • #9
    Gertrude Stein
    “You attract what you need like a lover”
    Gertrude Stein

  • #10
    Gertrude Stein
    “You are so afraid of losing your moral sense that you are not willing to take it through anything more dangerous than a mud-puddle. ”
    Gertrude Stein

  • #11
    Gertrude Stein
    “If you are too careful, you are so occupied in being careful that you are sure to stumble over something.”
    Gertrude Stein

  • #12
    Gertrude Stein
    “You are extraordinary within your limits, but your limits are extraordinary!”
    Gertrude Stein, Everybody's Autobiography

  • #13
    Gertrude Stein
    “The one thing that everybody wants is to be free...not to be managed, threatened, directed, restrained, obliged, fearful, administered, they want none of these things they all want to feel free, the word discipline, and forbidden and investigated and imprisoned brings horror and fear into all hearts, they do not want to be afraid not more than is necessary in the ordinary business of living where one has to earn one's living and has to fear want and disease and death....The only thing that any one wants now is to be free, to be let alone, to live their life as they can, but not to be watched, controlled and scared, no no, not.

    ~ September, 1943”
    Gertrude Stein

  • #14
    Christopher Hitchens
    “I once spoke to someone who had survived the genocide in Rwanda, and she said to me that there was now nobody left on the face of the earth, either friend or relative, who knew who she was. No one who remembered her girlhood and her early mischief and family lore; no sibling or boon companion who could tease her about that first romance; no lover or pal with whom to reminisce. All her birthdays, exam results, illnesses, friendships, kinships—gone. She went on living, but with a tabula rasa as her diary and calendar and notebook. I think of this every time I hear of the callow ambition to 'make a new start' or to be 'born again': Do those who talk this way truly wish for the slate to be wiped? Genocide means not just mass killing, to the level of extermination, but mass obliteration to the verge of extinction. You wish to have one more reflection on what it is to have been made the object of a 'clean' sweep? Try Vladimir Nabokov's microcosmic miniature story 'Signs and Symbols,' which is about angst and misery in general but also succeeds in placing it in what might be termed a starkly individual perspective. The album of the distraught family contains a faded study of Aunt Rosa, a fussy, angular, wild-eyed old lady, who had lived in a tremulous world of bad news, bankruptcies, train accidents, cancerous growths—until the Germans put her to death, together with all the people she had worried about.”
    Christopher Hitchens, Hitch 22: A Memoir

  • #15
    Vladimir Nabokov
    “I think it is all a matter of love; the more you love a memory the stronger and stranger it becomes”
    Vladimir Nabokov



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