Toxic Families Who Scapegoat Quotes & Sayings
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Top Toxic Families Who Scapegoat Quotes

Why is it Americans are socially permitted to say 'fricking' when in fact everyone knows the word they're actually saying is 'fucking'?
... here you have some bland ho-bag telly presenter saying 'I'm so fricking mad' about whatever, while you, the home viewer, know she's three millimeters away from saying 'I'm so fucking mad'. But instead of being outraged because she basically said 'fucking' on TV, everyone giggles, like she's being cute.
... it's like ten times worse because the public is thinking 'fucking, fucking, fucking'. They're so full of shame or so socially conditioned that the mental effect of saying the word 'fucking' is technically amplified. By actually saying the word 'fucking' in real life, instead of 'fricking', you're doing American society a favor. — Douglas Coupland

I never grew up in the Valley. I lived in Compton/Gardena my whole life. — Tyga

To accuse another of having weak kidneys, lungs, or heart, is not a crime; on the contrary, saying he has a weak brain is a crime. To be considered stupid and to be told so is more painful than being called gluttonous, mendacious, violent, lascivious, lazy, cowardly: every weakness, every vice, has found its defenders, its rhetoric, its ennoblement and exaltation, but stupidity hasn't. — Primo Levi

I had waited an eternity for this moment. My childhood fantasy was now coming true - I would be a dark angel of the night. — Ellen Schreiber

My chips are all cashed out. There's nothing to lose. Or maybe I've already lost it and found it, and whatever else there might be to lose ... — Gayle Forman

To comfort any mortal against loneliness, one other is enough. — Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings

In the West you have every opportunity for civilization to triumph. — Joseph Brodsky

The Nazgul they were; the Ringwraiths, the Enemy's most terribly servants; darkness went with them and they cried with the voices of death. — J.R.R. Tolkien

Particularly in the deepest and most important things, we are unutterably alone, — Rainer Maria Rilke