Depression Paragraph Quotes & Sayings
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Top Depression Paragraph Quotes
Under that heart of stone beat muscles of pure flint. — Sid Waddell
Don't apologize for all the tears you've cried, you've been way too strong now for all your life. — Mat Kearney
In the midst of tragedy we start the comedy. — Agatha Christie
The dark moppets of dread played their paranoid hopscotch across Moist's inner eyeballs. — Terry Pratchett
It's like he knows everything. And I don't have to say a word. — Hannah Harrington
Yes I say that I am enlightened. What does that mean? It means I live in a condition of light ... There really is no primary self anymore. — Frederick Lenz
The hardest thing about being a writer is convincing your wife that lying on the sofa is work. — John Hughes
Depression is like ... it's like when you meticulously scroll up through hundreds of pages in a Word document to find a specific paragraph you need to fix, and then you try to type but it automatically takes you right back down to the bottom because you forgot to place your cursor where you wanted to type. And then you bang your head against the desk because you just totally lost your place and then your boss walks in while you have your head planted on your desk and you see her shoes behind you so you immediately say, I'm not sleeping. I was just banging my head against the desk because I fucked something up. — Jenny Lawson
I made the mistake of watching "A.I." on cable the week they showed it about 792 times, and I ended up watching it every time it was on. — Joe Bob Briggs
Cooking was a talent of her mother's that Amina often thought of as an evolutionary way for Kamala to survive herself with friendships intact. Like plumage that expanded to rainbow an otherwise unremarkable bird, Kamala's ability to transform raw ingredients into sumptuous meals brought her the kind of love her personality on its own might have repelled. — Mira Jacob
Poor Fa'a, I said, although my answer was more reflexive than anything else. He was a good, kind person, and although I thought he was being melodramatic, I appreciated his compassion. In the absence of action, Poor Fa'a seemed to be the only thing to say. — Hanya Yanagihara