Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Svetlana Chmakova

Quote by Svetlana Chmakova

“Penelope? Thank you. For not leaving me alone to deal with this . . . when things got hard. other people would have. You're a true friend.”

Quote by Svetlana Chmakova

Book:Awkward

Work

Awkward

Browse quotes and source details for this work. more

Author

Svetlana Chmakova

Browse famous quotes and profile details for Svetlana Chmakova. more

You May Also Like

“Someday, you will leave this town and venture into unfamiliar territories. If your heart yearns for exploration, your soul carries a message for you. Perhaps there’s something awaiting you in the place you desire to go, even if you’re uncertain of its exact location at present. The crucial thing is to trust your heart’s calling and embark on the journey when it signals that the time is right. Embrace the undeniable power of destiny without hesitation.”

“Tapascharya, spiritual practice means: accepting the truth that you are alone; that there is no way one can have a friend, a companion. No matter how much you long for it, regardless of how much you close your eyes and dream of them – you will still remain alone. For lives you built a home, you built a family, and then you lost it – and all through that you have always remained alone. Not even slightly has your aloneness been ever affected. So one who has known, one who has accepted that he is alone, for him there is an indication in this sutra: CONSCIOUSNESS IS THE BEING. Only being is yours, nothing else.”

“THE CONSCIOUSNESS IS THE ATMAN, THE SOUL. The first meaning is: in this world, only consciousness is yours. The word atman means: that which is your own. Regardless of how much the rest may appear to you as your own, it is alien. All of that which you otherwise claim as yours – friends, loved ones, family, wealth, fame, high position, a great empire – it is all a deception. Because one day death will snatch it all away from you. So death is the criterion for determining who is your own and who is the stranger. That which death can separate you from, know that it didn’t belong to you, and that which it can’t, was indeed your own.”

“I have always been a loner. Even as a child, when my family and friends were off attending parties I would be sequestered in my room, sketchpad in hand, stereo by my side, listening to seductive R&B. Solitude was something I took for granted. Coming from a large family I needed solitude in order to think straight and paint my way out of confusion. My parents were accepting of the fact that I kept to myself and they respected my decision even though it went against my Somali upbringing, a culture rooted in boisterousness and joie de vivre.”