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Repulsive Quotes

Quotes tagged as "repulsive" Showing 1-13 of 13
Douglas Wilson
“Immodest and attractive is easy. Modest and repulsive is easy too. But modest and attractive is an art form.”
Douglas Wilson, 5 Paths to the Love of Your Life: Defining Your Dating Style

Flannery O'Connor
“The truth does not change according to our ability to stomach it emotionally. A higher paradox confounds the emotion as well as reason and there are long periods in the lives of all of us, when the truth as revealed by faith is hideous, emotionally disturbing, downright repulsive. Witness the dark night of the soul in individual saints . . .”
Flannery O'Connor

William     Thomson
“Do not imagine that mathematics is hard and crabbed, and repulsive to common sense. It is merely the etherealization of common sense.”
Lord Kelvin

Mokokoma Mokhonoana
“There probably was a time when the idea of having a toilet inside a house was repulsive.”
Mokokoma Mokhonoana

Curtis Tyrone Jones
“‪Repel people in your mind and you’ll repel them in your life. See others as above you in your mind and you’ll be below them in your life. Love people in your mind and connect with them in life. The brainwaves we send out are the only ones others will surf back to our shores.‬”
Curtis Tyrone Jones

“What is awful is at once appealing and repulsive, it fascinates and generates disgust, and those who succumb to the awful can only escape it at the price of ennui, of boredom.”
Hubertus Kohle, Dark Romanticism: From Goya to Max Ernst

Dan Chaon
“Her name...was Mrs. marina Orlova, and she had grown up in Siberia. Later, she would tell him that she loathed the American custom of constantly smiling: "They are like chimpanzees," she said, in her bitter exclamatory voice. She grimaced, baring her teeth grotesquely. "Eee!" she said. "I smile at you! Eee! It is repulsive.”
Dan Chaon, You Remind Me of Me

R.E.  Vance
“He smiled and as his lips parted, little bits of solid waste fell from them. Hellelujah, we can only be what we are, I thought and wondered if I was as repulsive to him as he was to me. I don't think so, because even though he literally wore a shit-eating grin, I sensed he was genuinely happy to see me”
R.E. Vance, GoneGodWorld, Episode Two

Charlie Kaufman
“Perhaps you are repulsed by me. Well, perhaps you are the one with the problem, not I. Perhaps you are the repulsive one. Perhaps you have never cared enough about anything in your life to weep at its loss. If that is the case, it is I who pity you. You will go through your brutish existence experiencing the small pleasures of taking things that are not yours, going places you are not welcome, sticking your elbow into the legally purchased space of another. Then you will die. Congratulations: That is your life. I hope you are happy with it. I hope you don’t regret, on your deathbed, that you never felt love, or joy, or loss. Yes, loss. There is a profound sweet melancholy in the experience of loss. It is the most delectable and pungent spice on the spice rack of life. Too bad you won’t taste it, buddy. I guess it doesn’t go with burgers and beer.”
Charlie Kaufman, Antkind

Laurence Galian
“There is an apocryphal esoteric tale about the Christos that very much applies to this situation. One day the Christos and His closest students were walking across a bridge. Spiritually, bridges represent a way to 'cross over,' a means to arrive at a great truth, and a means to overcome obstacles. Bridges are an isthmus between life and death, a liminal (in-between) experience. While walking across the bridge, suddenly the Apostles rushed the Christos to one side of the bridge, indicating that they did not want Him to see something. The Christos demanded that the Apostles move out of the way and allow Him to see what they were hiding. The Christos looked down and saw that the Apostles had been hiding a dead dog that was in an advanced state of decay and putrefaction. Rather than covering His nose and turning away, instead the Christos knelt down and regarded the dog. Then he turned his gaze toward the Apostles and said, 'Look at the beautiful white teeth of this dog.' The Christos was teaching His Apostles that it is important to notice what is admirable and beautiful even in what most people would regard as repulsive.”
Laurence Galian, Alien Parasites: 40 Gnostic Truths to Defeat the Archon Invasion!

Søren Kierkegaard
“Why can’t a night like that be longer? If Alectryon could put a foot wrong,101 why can’t the sun be compassionate enough to do the same? Still, now it is over and I want never to see her again. Once a girl has given away everything, she is weak, she has lost everything; for in the man innocence is a negative factor, while for the woman it is her whole worth. Now all resistance is impossible, and only when it is there is it beautiful to love; once it is gone, love is only weakness and habit. I do not wish to be reminded of my relation to her; she has lost her fragrance, and the time has gone when, for pain over her untrue lover, a girl is transformed into a heliotrope.102 I will not take leave of her; nothing disgusts me more than a woman’s tears and a woman’s prayers, which change everything yet are really of no consequence. I have loved her, but from now on she can no longer engage my soul. If I were a god I would do for her what Neptune did for a nymph: change her into a man.
Nevertheless, it would really be worthwhile knowing whether one couldn’t poetize oneself out of a girl, whether one couldn’t make her so proud that she imagined it was she who had wearied of the relationship. It could become a quite interesting epilogue, which in its own right might be of psychological interest, and besides that, enrich one with many erotic observations.”
Søren Kierkegaard, Either/Or: A Fragment of Life

Sarah J. Maas
“Males are horrible creatures, aren't they?' Amren said.

'Repulsive,' Mor said, clicking her tongue.

Some surviving, small part of my heart wanted to... laugh at that.”
Sarah J. Maas, A Court of Mist and Fury

Craig D. Lounsbrough
“The idea of God is repulsive to those who really don’t have an idea of God.”
Craig D. Lounsbrough