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  • #1
    Margaret Atwood
    “The moon is a stone and the sky is full of deadly hardware, but oh God, how beautiful anyway.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #2
    Margaret Atwood
    “But who can remember pain, once it’s over? All that remains of it is a shadow, not in the mind even, in the flesh. Pain marks you, but too deep to see. Out of sight, out of mind.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #3
    Margaret Atwood
    “Better never means better for everyone... It always means worse, for some.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #4
    Margaret Atwood
    “What I need is perspective. The illusion of depth, created by a frame, the arrangement of shapes on a flat surface. Perspective is necessary. Otherwise there are only two dimensions. Otherwise you live with your face squashed up against a wall, everything a huge foreground, of details, close-ups, hairs, the weave of the bedsheet, the molecules of the face. Your own skin like a map, a diagram of futility, criscrossed with tiny roads that lead nowhere. Otherwise you live in the moment. Which is not where I want to be.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #5
    Margaret Atwood
    “But people will do anything rather than admit that their lives have no meaning. No use, that is. No plot.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #6
    Margaret Atwood
    “Night falls. Or has fallen. Why is it that night falls, instead of rising, like the dawn? Yet if you look east, at sunset, you can see night rising, not falling; darkness lifting into the sky, up from the horizon, like a black sun behind cloud cover. Like smoke from an unseen fire, a line of fire just below the horizon, brushfire or a burning city. Maybe night falls because it’s heavy, a thick curtain pulled up over the eyes. Wool blanket.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #7
    Margaret Atwood
    “I am not your justification for existence.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #8
    Margaret Atwood
    “You can wet the rim of a glass and run your finger around the rim and it will make a sound. This is what I feel like: this sound of glass. I feel like the word shatter. I want to be with someone.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #9
    Margaret Atwood
    “Sometimes she would cry. I was so lonely, she'd say. You have no idea how lonely I was. And I had friends, I was a lucky one, but I was lonely anyway.

    I admired my mother in some ways, although things between us were never easy. She expected too much from me, I felt. She expected me to vindicate her life for her, and the choices she'd made. I didn't want to live my life on her terms. I didn't want to be the model offspring, the incarnation of her ideas. We used to fight about that. I am not your justification for existence, I said her to once.
    I want her back. I want everything back, the way it was. But there is no point to it, this wanting.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #10
    Margaret Atwood
    “How easy it is to invent a humanity, for anyone at all.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #11
    Margaret Atwood
    “Sanity is a valuable possesion; I hoard it the way people once hoarded money. I save it, so I will have enough, when the time comes.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #12
    Margaret Atwood
    “The newspaper stories were like dreams to us, bad dreams dreamt by others. How awful, we would say, and they were, but they were awful without being believable. They were too melodramatic, they had a dimension that was not the dimension of our lives. We were the people who were not in the papers. We lived in the blank white spaces at the edges of print. It gave us more freedom. We lived in the gaps between the stories.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #13
    Margaret Atwood
    “The night is mine, my own time, to do with it as I will, as long as I am quiet. As long as I don't move. As long as I lie still. The difference between lie and lay. Lay is always passive.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #14
    Margaret Atwood
    “I remember the rules, rules that were never spelled out but every woman knew: Don't open your door to a stranger, even if he says he is the police. Make him slide his ID under the door. Don't stop on the road to help a motorist pretending to be in trouble. Keep the locks on and keep going. If anyone whistles, don't turn to look. Don't go into a laundromat, by yourself, at night.

    I think about laundromats. What I wore to them: shorts, jeans, jogging pants. What I put into them: my own clothes, my own soap, my own money, money I had earned myself. I think about having such control.

    Now we walk along the same street, in red pairs, and not man shouts obscenities at us, speaks to us, touches us. No one whistles.

    There is more than one kind of freedom, said Aunt Lydia. Freedom to and freedom from.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #15
    Margaret Atwood
    “At moments like this I envy those who have found a safe haven in which to bestow their hearts; or perhaps I envy them for having a heart to bestow. I often feel that I myself am without one, and possess in its stead merely a heart shaped stone.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #16
    Margaret Atwood
    “Fatigue is here, in my body, in my legs and eyes. That is what gets you in the end. Faith is only a word, embroidered.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale

  • #17
    Margaret Atwood
    “They seemed to be able to choose. We seemed to be able to choose, then. We were a society dying of too much choice.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #18
    Margaret Atwood
    “Freedom, like everything else, is relative.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #19
    Margaret Atwood
    “We've learned to see the world in gasps.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #20
    Margaret Atwood
    “I wait. I compose myself. My self is a thing I must now compose, as one composes a speech. What I must present is a made thing, not something born”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #21
    Margaret Atwood
    “I would like to be without shame. I would like to be shameless. I would like to be ignorant. Then I would not know how ignorant I was.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #22
    Margaret Atwood
    “If you don't like it, change it, we said, to each other and to ourselves. And so we would change for the man, for another one. Change, we were sure, was for the better always. We were revisionists; what we revised was ourselves.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #23
    Margaret Atwood
    “As we know from the study of history, no new system can impose itself upon a previous one without incorporating many of the elements to be found in the latter...”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #24
    Margaret Atwood
    “Some days I do appreciate things more, eggs, flowers, but then I decide I'm only having an attack of sentimentality, my brain going pastel Technicolor, like a beautiful-sunset greeting cards they used to make so many of in California. High-gloss hearts.
    The danger is grayout.”
    Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale

  • #25
    Albert Camus
    “My soul’s a burden to me, I’ve had enough of it. I’m eager to be in that country, where the sun kills every question. I don’t belong here.”
    Albert Camus

  • #26
    Bangambiki Habyarimana
    “We are moved by self-interest, even when we seek to do good to others.”
    Bangambiki Habyarimana, The Great Pearl of Wisdom

  • #27
    “The most altruistic and sustainable philosophies fail before the brute brain stem imperative of self-interest.”
    Peter Watts, Blindsight

  • #28
    Henry Hazlitt
    “ECONOMICS IS HAUNTED by more fallacies than any other study known to man. This is no accident. The inherent difficulties of the subject would be great enough in any case, but they are multiplied a thousandfold by a factor that is insignificant in, say, physics, mathematics or medicine—the special pleading of selfish interests.”
    Henry Hazlitt, Economics in One Lesson

  • #29
    Tom Clancy
    “They loved their country largely because they controlled it.”
    Tom Clancy, Executive Orders

  • #30
    Michael Bassey Johnson
    “Stay away from lazy parasites, who perch on you just to satisfy their needs, they do not come to alleviate your burdens, hence, their mission is to distract, detract and extract, and make you live in abject poverty.”
    Michael Bassey Johnson



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