Tag: Quote

  • Be Water

    “Be like water making its way through cracks. Do not be assertive, but adjust to the object, and you shall find a way around or through it. If nothing within you stays rigid, outward things will disclose themselves.

    Empty your mind, be formless. Shapeless, like water. If you put water into a cup, it becomes the cup. You put water into a bottle and it becomes the bottle. You put it in a teapot, it becomes the teapot. Now, water can flow or it can crash. Be water, my friend.”

    ― Bruce Lee

  • Tragedy is Not of Persons

    Tragedy is not an imitation of persons, but of actions and of life. Well-being and ill-being reside in action, and the goal of life is an activity, not a quality; people possess certain qualities in accordance with their character, but they achieve well-being or its opposite on the basis of how they fare.”


  • A Failure to Think

    Evil comes from a failure to think. It defies thought for as soon as thought tries to engage itself with evil and examine the premises and principles from which it originates, it is frustrated because it finds nothing there. That is the banality of evil.”

    ― Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil

  • This Is It’s Horror

    Good can be radical; evil can never be radical, it can only be extreme, for it possesses neither depth nor any demonic dimension yet—and this is its horror—it can spread like a fungus over the surface of the earth and lay waste the entire world. Evil comes from a failure to think.”

    — Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil

  • Stand

    The wheel turns, the struggle continues, and the command is always the same. Be true. Stand.”

    — Stephen King, The Stand, “S1E09: The Circle Closes“, CBS

  • It’s Just the Weather

    You are the sky. Everything else—it’s just the weather.”

    Pema Chödrön (via swissmiss)

  • Woe to Those

    Woe to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter.”

    — Isaiah 5:20 (via @middlechurch)

  • You Don’t Have to Like It

    You don’t have to always be comfortable. You don’t have to like everything you do.”

    Carrie Fisher

  • From Here

    Your own positive future begins in this moment. All you have is right now. Every goal is possible from here.”

    — Lao Tzu (via WeCroak)

  • The Day After Christmas

    I felt overstuffed and dull and disappointed, the way I always do the day after Christmas, as if whatever it was the pine boughs and the candles and the silver and gilt-ribboned presents and the birch-log fires and the Christmas turkey and the carols at the piano promised never came to pass.”

    — Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar

  • Self-Destroying

    As our own species is in the process of proving, one cannot have superior science and inferior morals. The combination is unstable and self-destroying.”

    — Arthur C. Clarke (via Dense Discovery)

  • A Psychological Quark

    I write because…well, the best I can say for it is it’s a psychological quark of mine developed in response to whatever personal failings I have.”

    — Zadie Smith, Intimations: Six Essays

  • Sever the Sightlines

    [S]haming has social meaning. It characteristically results in a desire to sever the sightlines between the self and the other. We talk about wanting to hide our faces and the characteristic look of shame—the head bowed, the eyes lowered. But that’s not the only way of achieving such separation. Rather than hide, one can instead do away with the onlooker. ‘He who is ashamed would like to force the world not to look at him, not to notice his exposure. He would like to destroy the eyes of the world,’ as Erik Erikson famously put it (1963, 227).

    — Kate Manne, Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny

  • Controlling Experience

    Writing is control. The part of the university in which I teach should properly be called the Controlling Experience Department. Experience—mystifying, overwhelming, conscious, subconscious—rolls over everybody. We try to adapt, to learn, to accommodate, sometimes resisting, other times submitting to, whatever confronts us. But writers go further: they take this largely shapeless bewilderment and pour it into a mold of their own devising. Writing is all resistance””

    — Zadie Smith, Intimations: Six Essays