Anais Nin
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I stopped loving my father a long time ago. What remained was the slavery to a pattern.
Quote by Anais Nin
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Anais Nin Quotes
Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage.
Dreams pass into the reality of action. From the actions stems the dream again and this interdependence produces the highest form of living.
Throw your dreams into space like a kite, and you do not know what it will bring back, a new life, a new friend, a new love, a new country.
Dreams are necessary to life.
The personal life deeply lived always expands into truths beyond itself.
Age does not protect you from love. But love, to some extent, protects you from age.
I stopped loving my father a long time ago. What remained was the slavery to a pattern.
Good things happen to those who hustle.
Truth is something which can't be told in a few words. Those who simplify the universe only reduce the expansion of its meaning.
There are very few human beings who receive the truth, complete and staggering, by instant illumination. Most of them acquire it fragment by fragment, on a small scale, by successive developments, cellularly, like a laborious mosaic.
Best Quotes
Men become much more attractive when they start looking older. But it doesn't do much for women, though we do have an advantage: make-up.
My dad was a Methodist minister.
Great perils have this beauty, that they bring to light the fraternity of strangers.
I have always imagined that Paradise will be a kind of library.
The most beautiful as well as the most ugly inclinations of man are not part of a fixed biologically given human nature, but result from the social process which creates man.
I don't build in order to have clients. I have clients in order to build.
All the legal action I've taken against newspapers has had a massively positive effect on my life and achieved exactly what I wanted, which is privacy and non-harassment.
The Ukrainian community is tight-knit by nature.
Over and over, we hear politicians say they can't spend our tax dollars on environmental protection when the economy is so fragile.
That's a central part of philosophy, of ethics. What do I owe to strangers? What do I owe to my family? What is it to live a good life? Those are questions which we face as individuals.
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