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I think it's the human spirit inside of all of us that has an enormous capacity to survive.
Amanda Lindhout
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Amanda Lindhout
Age: 43
Born: 1981
Born: June 12
Autobiographer
Humanitarian
Journalist
Scott
Think
Thinking
Survive
Enormous
Capacity
Inside
Spirit
Human
Humans
More quotes by Amanda Lindhout
Being in the dark, there's a real weight to it. It's heavy.
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Maintaining my dignity is so important for me.
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In my version of paradise, the air was always cold and the rivers ran with candy.
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Every day I have many choices to make about who I want to be.
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I don't think I'm unusual in that, in my 20s, like many people, I felt invincible.
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I am so proud to be a Canadian.
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I've realized that the world is, in essence, full of banana peels - loaded with things that may unwittingly trip an internal wire in my mind, opening a floodgate of fears without warning.
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I have watched lives change. I have seen women gain confidence.
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Getting on a plane is hard for me, but I do it, because travel is vital to me.
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Forgiving is not an easy thing to do.
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I'm afraid of elevators, because they are an enclosed space, but I get in.
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I know firsthand how critical support systems are.
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I'm not afraid of IED's, bullets, mortars.
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The road to recovery will not always be easy, but I will take it one day at a time, focusing on the moments I've dreamed about for so long.
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A little goes a long way in Somalia: $5 will feed a person there for about two weeks.
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Because that’s the thing about the exact moment when you get somewhere that has required effort: There’s a freeze-frame instant of total fulfillment, when every expectation has been met and the world is perfect.
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Contemplating Christmas when you are isolated and far from home brings its own unique pain.
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I used my captors names every chance I had. It was intentional, a way of reminding them that I saw them, of pegging them, of making them see me in return.
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I swung from one place to the next, sometimes backward, sometimes forward, capitalizing on my own momentum, knowing that at some point my arms—or, more accurately, my quivering bank balance, accessed through foreign ATMs—would give out, and I’d fall to the ground.
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The same men who are placing all these outrageous restrictions on women’s freedoms in southern Somalia – that type of mentality – that’s what I had to deal with in captivity.
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