I lie down by the side
A scrapbook of things to share with you, whoever you may be.

"Feel, feel, I say—feel for all you’re worth, and even if it half kills you, for that is the only way to live." - Henry James
creatingaquietmind:

(by hexiaa)
“I want to lie down like a tired child and weep away this life and my diary shall receive me on its downy pillow. Most children do not know what they cry for; nor do I, altogether.”
—  Virginia Woolf, Diary Entry, 7 December 1925 (via kaleidoscopedreams)

(Source: violentwavesofemotion)

“I would like to be the air that inhabits you for a moment only. I would like to be that unnoticed and that necessary.”
“but I say whatever
one loves, is”
—  Sappho, Poems and Fragments, trans. Stanley Lombardo (via proustitute)
“Hold on where you are above everything else. Learn to live the good in your heart, although you may never speak of it, and devote your life to it.”
—  Wallace Stevens to his daughter Holly, October 1942 (via leopoldgursky)
“Don’t be someone that searches, finds, and then runs away”
—  Paulo Coelho (via kari-shma)

You will hear that she has left the country, that there was a gift she wanted you to have, but it is lost before it reaches you. Late one night the telephone will sign, and a voice that might be hers will say something that you cannot interpret before the connection crackles and is broken.

Several years later, from a taxi, you will see someone in a doorway who looks like her, but she will be gone by the time you persuade the driver to stop. You will never see her again.

Whenever it rains you will think of her.

—  Neil Gaiman (via thewalnutletters)

(Source: honeychurch)

“I actually attack the concept of happiness. The idea that - I don’t mind people being happy - but the idea that everything we do is part of the pursuit of happiness seems to me a really dangerous idea and has led to a contemporary disease in Western society, which is fear of sadness. It’s a really odd thing that we’re now seeing people saying “write down 3 things that made you happy today before you go to sleep”, and “cheer up” and “happiness is our birthright” and so on. We’re kind of teaching our kids that happiness is the default position - it’s rubbish. Wholeness is what we ought to be striving for and part of that is sadness, disappointment, frustration, failure; all of those things which make us who we are. Happiness and victory and fulfillment are nice little things that also happen to us, but they don’t teach us much. Everyone says we grow through pain and then as soon as they experience pain they say “Quick! Move on! Cheer up!” I’d like just for a year to have a moratorium on the word “happiness” and to replace it with the word “wholeness”. Ask yourself “is this contributing to my wholeness?” and if you’re having a bad day, it is.”
—  Hugh Mackay (via aeloquence)

(Source: beautemillesimee)

“We travel, some of us forever, to seek other places, other lives, other souls.”
—  Anaïs Nin  (via night-onthe-run)

(Source: quote-book)

“It is as if I had completely lost the ability to bring within reach the conditions that can help me; when I grasp at any, there are new aggravations and evasions, the days pass by, and with them who knows how much life. Shouldn’t one invent some grotesque figure just in order finally to introduce the sentence: ‘He spent the last six or seven years fastening a coat button that kept coming undone’?”
—  

Rilke, May 16, 1911. (via time immemorial)

  (via invisiblestories)

“There was a crime. But there were also the lovers. Lovers and their happy ends have been on my mind all night long. As into the sunset we sail. An unhappy inversion. It occurs to me that I have not traveled so very far after all, since I wrote my little play. Or rather, I’ve made a huge digression and doubled back to my starting place. It is only in this last version that my lovers end well, standing side by side on a South London pavement as I walk away. All the preceding drafts were pitiless. But now I can no longer think what purpose would be served if, say, I tried to persuade my reader, by direct or indirect means, that Robbie Turner died of septicemia at Bray Dunes on 1 June 1940, or that Cecilia was killed in September of the same year by the bomb that destroyed Balham Underground station. That I never saw them in that year. That my walk across London ended at the church on Clapham Common, and that a cowardly Briony limped back to the hospital, unable to confront her recently bereaved sister. That the letters the lovers wrote are in the archives of the War Museum. How could that constitute an ending? What sense or hope or satisfaction could a reader draw from such an account? Who would want to believe that they never met again, never fulfilled their love? Who would want to believe that, except in the service of the bleakest realism? I couldn’t do it to them. I’m too old, too frightened, too much in love with the shred of life I have remaining. I face an incoming tide of forgetting, and then oblivion. I no longer possess the courage of my pessimism. When I am dead, and the Marshalls are dead, and the novel is finally published, we will only exist as my inventions. Briony will be as much of a fantasy as the lovers who shared a bed in Balham and enraged their landlady. No one will care what events and which individuals were misrepresented to make a novel. I know there’s always a certain kind of reader who will be compelled to ask, But what really happened? The answer is simple: the lovers survive and flourish. As long as there is a single copy, a solitary typescript of my final draft, then my spontaneous, fortuitous sister and her medical prince survive to love.”
—  from Atonement by Ian MacEwan (via ambulat-in-bella)

(Source: vega-ofthe-lyre)

“It’s the middle of the night, but time keeps going on, and it also goes round and around, like the sun and the moon on the tall clock in the parlour. Soon it will be daybreak. Soon the day will break. I can’t stop it from breaking in the same way it always does, and then from lying there broken; always the same day, which comes around again like clockwork. It begins with the day before, and then the day before, and then it’s the day itself. A Saturday. The breaking day. The day the butcher comes.”
—  Margaret Atwood, Alias Grace (via sketchofthepast)
“I think it’s intoxicating when somebody is so unapologetically who they are.”
—  Don Cheadle (via sol-psych)

(Source: freshgypsy)

“My cousin Helen, who is in her 90s now, was in the Warsaw ghetto during World War II. She and a bunch of the girls in the ghetto had to do sewing each day. And if you were found with a book, it was an automatic death penalty. She had gotten hold of a copy of ‘Gone With the Wind’, and she would take three or four hours out of her sleeping time each night to read. And then, during the hour or so when they were sewing the next day, she would tell them all the story. These girls were risking certain death for a story. And when she told me that story herself, it actually made what I do feel more important. Because giving people stories is not a luxury. It’s actually one of the things that you live and die for.”
—  Neil Gaiman  (via misguidedviewsofperfection)

(Source: jaynestown)