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Kundera Festival Of Insignificance Quotes & Sayings

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Top Kundera Festival Of Insignificance Quotes

Kundera Festival Of Insignificance Quotes By Paulo Coelho

When I came here, I was deeply depressed. Now I'm proud to say I'm insane. Outside I'll behave exactly like everyone else. I'll go shopping at the supermarket, I'll exchange trivialities with my friends, I'll waste precious time watching television. But I know that my soul is free and that I can dream and talk with other worlds that, before I came here, I didn't even imagine existed. — Paulo Coelho

Kundera Festival Of Insignificance Quotes By Mrs. Oliphant

This, as it happened, had fallen to his sister's share instead, and Lucilla stood opposite to her looking at her, attentive and polite, and unresponsive. If Harry had only not been such a fool ten years ago! for Mrs Woodburn began to think now with Aunt Jemima, that Lucilla did not marry because she was too comfortable, and, without any of the bother, could have everything her own way. — Mrs. Oliphant

Kundera Festival Of Insignificance Quotes By Nina LaCour

I think that sometimes people want something so much that they manifest it. Or at least they try to. — Nina LaCour

Kundera Festival Of Insignificance Quotes By Nancy Holder

What kind of freaks are they? Katelyn thought as they continued to circle her. Is this some result of banjo inbreeding? — Nancy Holder

Kundera Festival Of Insignificance Quotes By Ellen Greene

I think creating of any sort, whatever line you're in, is paramount - you can be an architect, you can be a banker, you can be anything - I think that when you create, you're closest to God and yourself. — Ellen Greene

Kundera Festival Of Insignificance Quotes By Mesa Selimovic

No one should be allowed to stop in one place any longer than necessary. A man isn't a tree, and being settled in one place is his misfortune. It saps his courage, breaks his confidence. When a man settles down somewhere, he agrees to any and all of its conditions, even the disagreeable ones, and frightens himself with the uncertainty that awaits him. Change to him seems like abandonment, like a loss of an investment: someone else will occupy his domain, and he'll have to begin again. Digging oneself in marks the real beginning of old age, because a man is young as long as he isn't afraid to make new beginnings. If he stays in the same place, he has to put up with things, or take action. If he moves on, he keeps his freedom; he's ready to change places and the conditions imposed on him. — Mesa Selimovic

Kundera Festival Of Insignificance Quotes By Trista Mateer

I hope one day
somebody loves you
so much

that they see violets
in the bags under your eyes,
sunsets in the downward arch
of your lips

that they recognize you
as something green,
something fresh and still growing
even if sometimes
you are growing sideways

that they do not waste their time
trying to fix you. — Trista Mateer