“Quieting a room is one of my favorite things to do.”
Source: The Nesting Place: It Doesn't Have to Be Perfect to Be Beautiful
“Home isn't only about pillows and scented candles either. It's about people. Whether a person is single, in a relationship, has a family, or in a community.”
Source: Designing Happily Ever After
“What happens to a wanderer?” Moses asked Neph. “Does he ever come home?” And Neph answered ruefully that wanderers were those who sought their home – not those who left it. The cryptic intent was not lost on Moses, and when Neph asked him how he felt, he replied, “I am a stranger here.”
Source: Moses The Epic Story of His Rebellion in the Court of Egypt
“The moral of the story: you can't ruin something that you don't like, especially if it doesn't have much value to begin with.”
Source: The Nesting Place: It Doesn't Have to Be Perfect to Be Beautiful
“Paradise. A paradise it was in its majestic silence of cold wintry conditions. The world is a collection of paradises and my home is a sparkling paradise.”
Source: A Play of the Cosmos: Script of the Stars
“Most part of the house was empty, or rather ‘walls on display’. But it was home, and I couldn’t imagine a better home.”
Source: A Play of the Cosmos: Script of the Stars
“Love doesn't just stop at the door.”
“We must get home! How could we stray like this?
So far from home, we know not where it is,
Only in some fair, apple-blossomy place
Of children's faces--and the mother's face
We dimly dream it, till the vision clears”
Source: Complete Poetical Works of James Whitcomb Riley
“Yet there was something noble in the way Gertie presided over her home town, surrounded by people to whom she’d made herself useful, like the now-grown children who once rode her school bus, or the neighbor woman she took to Walmart every other week for quilt fabric.”
Source: This Is Where You Belong: The Art and Science of Loving the Place You Live
“In his book, Who’s Your City, the demographic Richard Florida divides people into three categories: the mobile, the stuck, and the rooted. We tend to focus on the first two—the mobile, who can pick up and move to opportunity—and the stuck, who lack the resources to leave where they are…but we cannot forget about the rooted: those who have the means and opportunity to move, but choose to stay…because they’re content where they are.”
Source: This Is Where You Belong: The Art and Science of Loving the Place You Live