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It's as if once you hit high school, you're programmed, like a robot, to be an asshole to your parents.
Sara Zarr
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Sara Zarr
Age: 54
Born: 1970
Born: October 3
Novelist
Writer
Cleveland
Ohio
Parent
High
School
Like
Programmed
Robot
Asshole
Robots
Parents
More quotes by Sara Zarr
And he left. I watched him walk out – he didn’t say good-bye, he didn’t even look back. It scared me, how easy it was for him to do that.
Sara Zarr
I do have a little bit more confidence in - or at least familiarity with - my process. For example, when it feels like it's going badly or that I'm lost, I know I'll eventually find my way because I've been through it before. But writing itself is still hard.
Sara Zarr
don’t mistake a new place for a new you.
Sara Zarr
I get a message from my dad. In the mood I'm in, I tear up to see his name in my inbox, and imagine him down the hall in bed, propped on pillows, emailing me. Hon,Enjoyed our gelato date the other night. I just want to say I'm proud of you for a lot of reasons. Also, I've attached a picture of my foot.He's such a weirdo goofball. I love him.
Sara Zarr
I wonder how you're supposed to know the exact moment when there's no more hope.
Sara Zarr
I'm remembering how this works. How life doesn't have to be only anxiety about what's gone wrong or could go worng, and complaints about the world around you. How a person you're excited about can remind you there's stuff going on beyond... routine oil changes and homework. Stuff that matters. Stuff to look forward to.
Sara Zarr
It's hard to say when my interest in writing began, or how. My mother read to my sister and me every night, and we always loved playing make-believe games. I had a well-primed imagination. I didn't start thinking about writing as a serious pursuit, a career I could have, until after college.
Sara Zarr
It's a jagged thing in my throat, how much I miss her.
Sara Zarr
Forgetting isn't enough. You can paddle away from the memories and think they are gone. But they will keep floating back, again and again and agian. They circle you, like sharks. Until, unless, something, someone? Can do more than just cover the wound.
Sara Zarr
When the remembering was done, the forgetting could begin.
Sara Zarr
We'd need a miracle, he says. A real one. Do you think those happen anymore?
Sara Zarr
That's how life feels to me. Everyone is doing it everyone knows how. To live and be who they are and find a place, find a moment. I'm still waiting.
Sara Zarr
You were never what I wanted to forget.
Sara Zarr
A know a place called New Beginnings, but I don't think it works quite like that. You can't just erase everything that came before.
Sara Zarr
Sometimes you want to hear your own mother's voice.
Sara Zarr
the mark we've left on each other is the color and shape of love. That's the unfinished business between us. because love, love is never finished.
Sara Zarr
Because love, love is never finished. It circles and circles, the memories out of order and not always complete.
Sara Zarr
What brings two people together anyway?
Sara Zarr
Try a little tenderness.
Sara Zarr
My books have been translated into various languages and sold in other countries, but I never have any contact with the foreign publishers and am so disconnected from that process that it seems almost imaginary. With 'How to Save a Life', I worked closely with Usborne editors and have been involved in the publicity.
Sara Zarr