house of spaces
there are worse prisons than words.
Unconsciously we all have a standard by which we measure other men, and if we examine closely we find that this standard is a very simple one, and is this: we admire them, we envy them, for great qualities we ourselves lack. Hero worship consists in just that. Our heroes are men who do things which we recognize, with regret, and sometimes with a secret shame, that we cannot do. We find not much in ourselves to admire, we are always privately wanting to be like somebody else. If everybody was satisfied with himself, there would be no heroes.
—Mark Twain
I’m not fascinated by people who smile all the time. What I find interesting is the way people look when they are lost in thought, when their face becomes angry or serious, when they bite their lip, the way they glance, the way they look down when they walk, when they are alone and smoking a cigarette, when they smirk, the way they half smile, the way they try and hold back tears, the way when their face says they want to say something but can’t, the way they look at someone they want or love… I love the way people look when they do these things. It’s… beautiful.
—Unknown
I want to take back at least half of the “I love you”s, because I didn’t mean them as much as the other ones. I want to take back the book of artsy photos I gave you, because you didn’t get it and said it was hipster trash. I want to take back what I said about you being an emotional zombie. I want to take back the time I called you “honey” in front of your sister and you looked like I had just shown her pictures of us having sex. I want to take back the wineglass I broke when I was mad, because it was a nice wineglass and the argument would have ended anyway. I want to take back the time we had sex in a rent-a-car, not because I feel bad about the people who got in the car after us, but because it was massively uncomfortable. I want to take back the trust I had while you were away in Austin. I want to take back the time I said you were a genius, because I was being sarcastic and I should have just said you’d hurt my feelings. I want to take back the secrets I told you so I can decide now whether to tell them to you again. I want to take back the piece of me that lies in you, to see if I truly miss it. I want to take back at least half the “I love you”s, because it feels safer that way.
—David Levithan (The Lover’s Dictionary)
We are dying from overthinking. We are slowly killing ourselves by thinking about everything. Think. Think. Think. You can never trust the human mind anyway. It’s a death trap.
—Anthony Hopkins
It’s easy to rip an unsewn stitch
Or tear the thread of an untold tale—
The song of us two together.
—Unknown author, from “Wulf and Eadwacer”, in The Exeter Book, trans. Craig Williamson
She died in my arms, saying “I don’t want to die.” That is what death is like. It doesn’t matter what uniforms the soldiers are wearing. It doesn’t matter how good the weapons are. I thought if everyone could see what I saw, we could never have war anymore.
—Jonathan Safran Foer
Gaston Bachelard (The Poetics of Space)

Gaston Bachelard (The Poetics of Space)

[Inside the coats in the window, all the pockets are empty. She is dreaming into them. How strange it would be to have a coat with empty pockets.] You could spend a whole lifetime and put nothing in them, ever, hands without obstruction, obligation, memory.
—Aimee Bender, from “Winter” 
It had never occurred to me that our lives, which had been so closely interwoven, could unravel with such speed. If I’d known, maybe I’d have kept tighter hold of them and not let unseen tides pull us apart.
Kazuo Ishiguro (Never Let Me Go)
Every book has a soul, the soul of the person who wrote it and the soul of those who read it and dream about it.
—Carlos Ruiz Zafon (The Angel’s Game)
Amy Plum(Die for Me)

Amy Plum(Die for Me)

I have immortal longings in me.
—William Shakespeare
The breaking of a wave cannot explain the whole sea.
—Vladimir Nabokov 
There must be more to life than having everything!
—Maurice Sendak (1928 - 05/08/2012)

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