“Porque en esta vida lo único que sienta cátedra es el prejuicio.”
Source: The Shadow Of The Wind
“Se me quiebra la voz aunque hay un millón de cosas que quiero decirle, así que me pongo de puntillas y lo beso, esperando lograr con esa caricia lo que me es imposible contarle de cualquier otra forma. Oliver me devuelve el beso con voracidad, tan hambriento como yo. Mordisquea mis labios y su lengua se hunde en mi boca con desesperación. Nos besamos con ansia, los prejuicios perdidos junto con una parte de nosotros mismos que nos dejamos en este instante único, en esta cocina; las emociones en los labios y en la piel, y el tiempo deteniéndose para nosotros solo una vez más.”
Source: Hasta que te rindas
“Pero pasó algo que siempre pasa y que nos pone en nuestro lugar a todos: el tiempo.”
Source: Trece latas de atún
“A la Naturaleza se la corrige, se la dirige. De lo contrario, los prejuicios nos aplastarían.”
Source: Crimen y Castigo
“Nos abrazamos a un mar de prejuicios si no damos nunca el primer paso a la hora de dudar.”
Source: Gladiadoras
“La sustitución de la historia por la ontología fue, sin embargo, una estación de tránsito: al cabo de pocos años, Lyotard se había pasado a la astrofísica.”
Source: The Origins of Postmodernity
“We can, to some degree, educate and manage, or at the very least, provide constructive outlets for what we are conscious of in ourselves. But if we are unconscious of something, it will sooner or later find a way to dominate and control us.”
Source: Dynamics of the Unconscious: Seminars in Psychological Astrology, Vol. 2
“An astrological placement describes an arrow which points somewhere, a creative energy which gradually layers flesh onto the bare bones of archetypal patterning, an intelligent movement which, over time, fills in the stark black-and-white outlines of the essential life-myth with the subtle colours of experience and individual choice.”
Source: The Luminaries: The Psychology of the Sun and Moon in the Horoscope, Vol 3 (Seminars in Psychological Astrology)
“This is called the tabula rasa theory—the notion that how other people treated you in early life gives rise to certain patterns or “scripts” which then determine your self-image and your expectations of what will happen to you later in life. (...) Now psychological astrology views all this slightly differently. Rather than just being born a blank slate and having things done to you which then lead you to form opinions about life and yourself, psychological astrology believes that you are already born with an innate predisposition which expects certain things to happen.”
Source: The Development of the Personality: Seminars in Psychological Astrology, Vol. 1
“The luminaries in the horoscope are truly instructors, reflecting what we could one day become, portraying in symbolic form the best of what might be achieved.”
Source: The Luminaries: The Psychology of the Sun and Moon in the Horoscope, Vol 3 (Seminars in Psychological Astrology)