“What you do today will affect you 90 days from now.”
Source: Stop The Madness: How the Highly Sensitive Person Can Thrive in a Chaotic World
“Today, I am doing nothing is my doing.”
“The greatest accomplishment of a human, a busy primate, is to be able to spend hours and hours without doing anything.”
Source: The Sovereign Artist: Meditations on Lifestyle Design
“If we can do things to want nothing, do nothing, and become nothing whilst filling ourselves completely with life, then it’s probably pretty REAL; if we’re doing it to want ‘more’, do ‘more’, and become ‘more’, then we might be lapsing into being UNREAL.”
Source: Trust: A Manual for Becoming the Void, Building Flow, and Finding Peace
“Your love has only ever come with
thorns, and I have only ever spent
so much time with my nose buried in its petals
that I didn't notice my hand
dripping blood from holding on so tightly.
Your love has only ever
been on borrowed time.
You blamed me
for not putting it in water.
I blamed you
for giving me something already
dying.”
“Failed Love
***
Once upon a time
The two souls
Across the ocean
The one with high IQ
And the other one,
With its description
In the waiting process
To merge
Into the body of the body
To stream the breaths
To become complete
For the new love history
But they also failed
As Romeo and Juliet.”
“The honeymoon phase couldn’t last forever.”
Source: In Limbo
“Where everything is words, you'd think I'd have some mastery and know my way around, but all this churning hatred, each man a verbal firing squad, immeasurable suspicions, a flood of mocking, angry talk, all of life a vicious debate, conversations in which there is nothing that cannot be said...no, I'd be better off in the jungle, I thought, where a roar's a roar and no one is hard put to miss its meaning.”
Source: Operation Shylock: A Confession
“Marriage is when women finally get what they want, and men wave the white flag, unaware of the firing squad which awaits.”
“But the old Italian commedia that I loved—Pantaloon, Harlequin, Scaramouche, and the rest—lived on as they always had, with tightrope walkers, acrobats, jugglers, and puppeteers, in the platform spectacles at the St.-Germain and the St.-Laurent fairs.”
Source: The vampire Lestat