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Facts mean nothing to wounded feelings.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
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Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Age: 67 †
Born: 1934
Born: September 14
Died: 2002
Died: April 24
Essayist
Journalist
Novelist
Writer
Queens
New York
Wounded
Feelings
Facts
Nothing
Mean
More quotes by Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
There is no way to take the danger out of human relationships.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Fantasies are more than substitutes for unpleasant reality they are also dress rehearsals, plans. All acts performed in the world begin in the imagination.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
The dream police will not let me have sexual fantasies.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Kindness and intelligence don't always deliver us from the pitfalls and traps: there are always failures of love, of will, of imagination. There is no way to take the danger out of human relationships.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
There is something worse than dying, and that is humiliation - at least so it seemed to me.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Nothing is more democratic, less judgmental, than water. Water doesn't care whether flesh is withered or fresh it caresses aged flesh and firm flesh with equal love.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
All our loves are contained in all our other loves.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
I love medieval cities they do not clamor for attention they possess their souls - their riches - in quiet formal, courteous, they reveal themselves slowly, stone by stone, garden by garden hidden treasures wait calmly to be loved and yield to introspective wandering.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
The past can be tamed and controlled.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Every generation reinvents the wheel - and in the process it often adds to rather than subtracts from a woman's burdens.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
my love of water ... is mingled with and almost indistinguishable from a fear of water (I can float in a vertical position - I enter a fugue state - but I cannot bear to bury my face in water).
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Porches are America's lost rooms.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Every house we have lived in, every building to which our hands have lent their work, belongs to us by virtue of love or of regret.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
the islands of Italy combine all the elements - fire, water, earth, and air - and that is irresistible.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Desire creates its own object.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
All is waiting and all is work all is change and all is permanence.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Unhappiness makes beggars or accountants of us all.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
I love cloisters, which are the architectural equivalent of a theological concept: perfect freedom within set boundaries.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
What you desire you call into being.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison
Italy offers one the most priceless of all one's possessions - one's own soul.
Barbara Grizzuti Harrison