“His lips are familiar. I know the shape of them, know how to make mine fit against them. His taste is familiar too. For all the illusions and colors and sweet smells... he has always tasted like skin. His breaths are shallow. I'm holding his life against my tongue, between my rows of teeth. He's offering it up.” KissLauren DestefanoSever Book:Sever Source: Sever
“I had to sever my emotional cord to escape the anger and shame that silently slithered through my head, disconnecting myself from the stares and whispers that followed me down the hall.” FeelingsStruggleEmotionalThoughtsWeaknessAngerShameGuiltEscapeEmmaSelf HatredDisconnectingStaresSever Book:Reason to Breathe Source: Reason to Breathe
“He had wished me well in finding my own fate to follow, and I never doubted his sincerity. But it had taken me years to accept that his absence in my life was a deliberate finality, an act he had chosen, a thing completed even as some part of my soul still dangled, waiting for his return. That, I think, is the shock of any relationship ending. It is realizing that what is still an ongoing relationship to someone is, for the other person, something finished and done with.” LoveSoulDonePainWishFriendshipRelationshipReturnConnectionChooseActWaitLeaveWellOverFinishSeparateFinalDepartSeverPart Ways Book:Fool's Assassin Source: Fool's Assassin
“As much as I had always longed to be freed of my duties and obligations, being released from such bonds was as much a severing as an emancipation.” RealityTruthFreedomResponsibilityDutyObligationReleaseTiesEndEmancipationBondsOutcomeResponsibilitiesDutiesSever Book:Fool's Errand Source: Fool's Errand
“A conception of a cognitive capacity can qualify as unrestricted in aspiration and yet be insufficiently capacious in conception. A conception of a capacity, in aspiring not to go outside the order to which the capacity belongs so as to explain the capacity, may unwittingly frame its conception of the target capacity in terms that sever it from the conditions required for its genuine possession. This is a difficult balance to strike correctly in philosophy. Frege is concerned with not admitting anything psychological into his conception of the logical. This is the mark of the unrestrictedness of his aspiration - his refusal to admit anything external to the order of logic in his account of logic. But he builds his guardrail of protection against falling into the psychological sufficiently far in from the actual danger point that he severs the unity of our capacity for knowledge. Hence the need for a de-psychologizing of Frege's conception of the psychological.” PhilosophyCognitionFrameSeverCognitive Capacity Book:The Logical Alien: Conant and His Critics Source: The Logical Alien: Conant and His Critics