Masha Allah Quotes & Sayings
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Top Masha Allah Quotes

The act of photography is like going on a hunt in which photographer and camera merge into one indivisible function. This is a hunt for new states of things, situations never seen before, for the improbable, for information. — Vilem Flusser

We have this terrible struggle to try to explain things to people who have no reason to want to know. — Richard P. Feynman

No country can be called free which is governed by an absolute power; and it matters not whether it be an absolute royal power or an absolute legislative power, as the consequences will be the same to the people. — Thomas Paine

hey its Uberunicorn here, im uploading my accountant for the first time! :D yay! im only uploading the books ive read in a short time: jan-dec, so i might not have so many books online j8st yet... - Uberunicorn, this one called cherub the recruit! Y X 3!!! — Robert Muchamore

Delight yourself with imagination and artistry and be inspired by life's beauty. — Amy Leigh Mercree

We often are creatures of momentum. — Rishank Jhavar

When I was little, I attended five different elementary schools. My parents are very restless people, which is probably where I get my own nomadic lifestyle from. — Evangeline Lilly

My mother protected me from the world and my father threatened me with it. — Quentin Crisp

Clothes are designed for the media, because it's a great show. — Oleg Cassini

Life is competitive; clothes gird us for the competition. — Edith Head

The truth of the matter is that - by an exorbitant paradox - I never stop believing that I am loved. I hallucinate what I desire. Each wound proceeds less from a doubt than from a betrayal: for only the one who loves can betray, only the one who believes himself loved can be jealous: that the other, episodically, should fail in his being, which is to love me - that is the origin of all my woes. A delirium, however, does not exist unless one wakens from it(there are only retrospective deliriums): one day, I realize what has happened to me: I thought I was suffering from not being loved, and yet it is because I thought I was loved that I was suffering; I lived in the complication of supposing myself simultaneously loved and abandoned. Anyone hearing my intimate language would have had to exclaim, as of a difficult child: But after all, what does he want? — Roland Barthes

Novel writing is far and away the most exhausting work I know. — C.S. Forester