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High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never by Barbara Kingsolver
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“In my own worst seasons I've come back from the colorless world of despair by forcing myself to look hard, for a long time, at a single glorious thing: a flame of red geranium outside my bedroom window. And then another: my daughter in a yellow dress. And another: the perfect outline of a full, dark sphere behind the crescent moon. Until I learned to be in love with my life again. Like a stroke victim retraining new parts of the brain to grasp lost skills, I have taught myself joy, over and over again(15).”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“Every one of us is called upon, perhaps many times, to start a new life. A frightening diagnosis, a marriage, a move, loss of a job...And onward full-tilt we go, pitched and wrecked and absurdly resolute, driven in spite of everything to make good on a new shore. To be hopeful, to embrace one possibility after another--that is surely the basic instinct...Crying out: High tide! Time to move out into the glorious debris. Time to take this life for what it is.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“Be careful what you give children, for sooner or later you are sure to get it back. ”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“If you ask me, when something extraordinary shows up in your life in the middle of the night, you give it a name and make it the best home you can.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“Art is the antidote that can call us back from the edge of numbness, restoring the ability to feel for another.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“Want is a thing that unfurls unbidden like fungus, opening large upon itself, stopless, filling the sky.
But needs, from one day to the next, are few enough to fit in a bucket, with room enough left to rattle like brittle brush in a dry wind.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“High fashion has the shelf life of potato salad. And when past its prime, it is similarly deadly.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“I hold on to my adopted shore, chanting private vows: wherever I am, let me never forget to distinguish want from need. Let me be a good animal today. Let me dance in the waves of my private tide, the habits of survival and love.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“It feels strange to me to be living in a box, hiding from the steadying influence of the moon; wearing the hide of a cow, which is supposed to be dyed to match God-knows-what, on my feet; making promises over the telephone about things I will do at a precise hour next year.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“When something extraordinary shows up in your life in the middle of the night, you give it a name and make it the best home you can.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“If humanity survives long enough to understand what he really was, they can dig him up and put on display the grandiose depravity of the twentieth century. ”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“The part of my soul that is driven to make stories is a fierce thing, like a ferret: long, sleek, incapable of sleep, it digs and bites through all I know of the world.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“You can fool history sometimes, but you can’t fool the memory of your intimates.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson: Essays from Now or Never
“Faith, by definition, is impervious to fact. A belief that can be changed by new information was probably a scientific one, not a religious one, and science derives its value from its openness to revision.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“Hope it an unbearably precious thing, worth its weight in feathers. If that's too much to think about, best to tuck it in a pocket anyway, and make it a habit.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“It only we could recover faith in a seed - and in all the other complicated marvels that can't fit in a sound bite. Then we humans might truly know the glory of knowing our place.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“I knew exactly what I should have said: Be careful what you give children, for sooner or later you are sure to get it back.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson: Essays from Now or Never
“Want is a thing that unfurls unbidden like fungus, opening large upon itself, stopless, filling the sky. But needs, from one day to the next, are few enough to fit in a bucket, with room enough left to rattle like brittlebush in a dry wind.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson: Essays from Now or Never
“I never put real people into my fiction - I can’t see the slightest point of that, when I have the alternative of inventing utterly subservient slave-people, whose every detail of appearance and behavior I can bend to serve my theme and plot.”
Barbara Kingsolver , High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“Until I learned to be in love with my life again. Like a stroke victim retraining new parts of the brain to grasp lost skills, i have taught myself joy, over and over again.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
tags: joy
“we went on record as half-bad musicians having wholehearted lives.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson: Essays from Now or Never
“Every one of us is called upon, probably many times, to start a new life. A frightening diagnosis, a marriage, a move, loss of a job or a limb or a loved one, a graduation, bringing a new baby home: it’s impossible to think at first how this all will be possible. Eventually, what moves it all forward is the subterranean ebb and flow of being alive among the living.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson: Essays from Now or Never
“A select group of friends and I have formed a secret slut society. We wear trousers, we have fascinating work, and it’s possible that the dust bunnies under our beds could be breeding dust bison.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
tags: essays
“A creature with a big enough head to make a contract should have the sense to make one it can keep.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“Like driving, parenting is a skill you learn by doing. You keep an eye out for oncoming disasters, and know when to stop and ask for directions. The skills you have going into it are hardly the point.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“I couldn't begin to imagine the life that was rolling out ahead of me. But I did understand it would pass over me with the force of a river, and that I needed to pin the water to its banks and hold it still, somehow, to give myself time to know it.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“To love life, really, must mean caring not only for the garden plot but also the wilderness beyond the fence, beauty and mystery for their own sake, because of how meager a world would be without them.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never
“The loss of empathy is also the loss of humanity, and that's no small tradeoff.”
Barbara Kingsolver, High Tide in Tucson : Essays from Now or Never