Transitioned Women Quotes & Sayings
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Top Transitioned Women Quotes

You cannot follow the trend of living independently of the realities of the kingdom of God without being naked — Sunday Adelaja

Blind luck, to arrive in the world with your properly formed parts in the right place, to be born to parents who were loving, not cruel, or to escape, by geographical or social accident, war or poverty. And therefore to find it so much easier to be virtuous. For a while, the case had left her numb, caring less, feeling less, going about her business, telling no one. But she became squeamish about bodies, barely able to look at her own or Jack's without feeling repelled. How was she to talk about this? Hardly plausible, to have told him that at this stage of a legal career, this one case among so many others, its sadness, its visceral — Ian McEwan

When words don't come easy, I make do with silence and find something in nothing." ~ Strider Marcus Jones, Poet — Strider Marcus Jones

I'm a professional journalist. Making up lies to fit the facts - it's what we do. — Andrew Klavan

Perfection is not to be attained, but to be pursued infinitely. — Abhijit Naskar

The year 1915 was one of meager results, the advantages remaining on the side of the Central Powers, with this understanding, however: The Allies were growing stronger because Great Britain was making rapid progress in marshaling her resources for war. — Kelly Miller

Lost: one bonnet, two clogs. Kept in spite of the odds: two thumbs, one life. — Frances Hardinge

It is also significant that the play opens with the objective presence of supernatural forces. The witches are not the figment of someone else's imagination because there is nobody else present to witness them. They are alone, and therefore they stand alone, utterly independent. We are in the real presence of evil, an evil that really exists whether we like it or not, an evil that is not merely the product of our fetid fetishes or our fevered imaginations. In its formal structure, therefore, Macbeth places us unequivocally in a supernatural cosmos, rendering implausible all materialistic interpretations of the play's intrinsic meaning. — William Shakespeare

As the light began to fade, the architects lit the library's gas jets, which hissed like mildly perturbed cats. — Erik Larson