Share
×
Inspirational Quotes
Authors
Professions
Topics
Tags
Quote
Not everyone out in a storm wants to be saved
Paula McLain
Share
Change background
T
T
T
Change font
Original
TAGS & TOPICS
Paula McLain
Age: 59
Born: 1965
Born: October 7
Author
Novelist
Poet
Writer
Fresno
California
Everyone
Storm
Saved
Wants
More quotes by Paula McLain
Why is it every other person you meet says they're an artist? A real artist doesn't need to gas on about it, he doesn't have time. He does his work and sweats it out in silence, and no one can help him at all.
Paula McLain
Though I often looked for one, I finally had to admit that there could be no cure for Paris.
Paula McLain
I would gladly have climbed out of my skin and into his that night, because I believed that was what love meant.
Paula McLain
All that was left for me was a terrible kind of paralysis, this waiting game, this heartbreak game.
Paula McLain
I knew that I could hate him all I wanted for the way he was hurting me, but I couldn’t ever stop loving him, absolutely, for what he was.
Paula McLain
My life was my life I would have to stare it down, somehow, and make it work for me.
Paula McLain
... and yet he could also be very charming, in a bookish, infinitely apologetic way.
Paula McLain
But love is love. It makes you do terribly stupid things.
Paula McLain
Nothing hurts if you don't let it.
Paula McLain
But when Bumby nursed, his fist clutching the fabric of my robe, his eyes soft and bottomless and locked on mine, as if I were the very heart of his universe, I couldn't help but melt into him.
Paula McLain
Books could be an incredible adventure. I stayed under my blanket and barely moved, and no one would have guessed how my mind raced and my heart soared with stories.
Paula McLain
I preferred to look at the sea, which said nothing and never made you feel alone.
Paula McLain
And sometimes I think there isn’t anything to us but our mistakes.
Paula McLain
Dogs are easy. If their tails are up and their eyes are soft, you're in.
Paula McLain
I also liked to look around at the houses surrounding the park and wonder about the people who filled them, what kinds of marriages they had and how they loved or hurt each other on any given day, and if they were happy, and whether they thought happiness was a sustainable thing.
Paula McLain
I'd never met anyone so vibrant or alive. He moved like light.
Paula McLain
This was my one brush with love. Was it love? It felt awful enough. I spent another two years crawling around in the skin of it, smoking too much and growing too thin and having stray thoughts of jumping from my balcony like a tortured heroine in a Russian novel.
Paula McLain
I'd had my share of rain. My mother's illness ... had weighed on me, but the years before had been heavy, too. I was only twenty eight.
Paula McLain
To marry was to say you believed in the future and in the past, too-that history and tradition and hope could stay knit together to hold you up.
Paula McLain
Maybe happiness was an hourglass already running out, the grains tipping, sifting past each other. Maybe it was a state of mind.
Paula McLain