Notes On A Nervous Planet Quotes

Quotes tagged as "notes-on-a-nervous-planet" Showing 1-7 of 7
Matt Haig
“I sometimes feel like my head is a computer with too many windows open. Too much clutter on the desktop. There is a metaphorical spinning rainbow wheel inside me. Disabling me. And if only I could find a way to switch off some of the frames, if only I could drag some of the clutter into the trash, then I would be fine. But which frame would I choose, when they all seem so essential? How can I stop my mind being overloaded when the world is overloaded? We can think about anything. And so it makes sense that we end up thinking about everything. We might have to, sometimes, be brave enough to switch the screens off in order to switch ourselves back on. To disconnect in order to reconnect.”
Matt Haig, Notes on a Nervous Planet

Matt Haig
“To enjoy life, we might have to stop thinking about what we will never be able to read and watch and say and do, and start to think of how to enjoy the world within our boundaries. To live on a human scale. To focus on the few things we can do, rather than the millions of things we can't. To not crave parallel lives. To find a smaller mathematics. To be a proud and singular one. An indivisible prime.”
Matt Haig, Notes on a Nervous Planet

Matt Haig
“Be a mystery, not a demographic. Be someone a computer could never quite know.”
Matt Haig, Notes on a Nervous Planet

Matt Haig
“Life can sometimes feel like an overproduced song, with a cacophony of a hundred instruments playing all at once. Sometimes the song sounds better stripped back to just a guitar and a voice. Sometimes, when a song has too much happening, it's hard to hear the song at all.”
Matt Haig, Notes on a Nervous Planet

Matt Haig
“It might be a strange irony that the cure for worrying about ageing is sometimes, well, ageing.”
Matt Haig, Notes on a Nervous Planet

Matt Haig
“When it comes to our minds, awareness is very often the solution itself.”
Matt Haig, Notes on a Nervous Planet

Matt Haig
“I stared at the tweet I was about to post. It wasn't going to add anything to my life. Or anyone else's life. It was just going to lead to more checking of my phone, like Pepys with his pocket watch. I pressed delete, and felt a strange relief as I watch each letter disappear.”
Matt Haig, Notes on a Nervous Planet