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  • #61
    H.P. Lovecraft
    “It is good to be a cynic 鈥 it is better to be a contented cat 鈥 and it is best not to exist at all.”
    H.P. Lovecraft, Collected Essays 5: Philosophy, Autobiography and Miscellany

  • #62
    Joseph Brodsky
    “Life鈥攖he way it really is鈥攊s a battle not between good and bad, but between bad and worse”
    Joseph Brodsky

  • #63
    H.L. Mencken
    “A cynic is a man who, when he smells flowers, looks around for a coffin.”
    H.L. Mencken

  • #64
    Diogenes of Sinope
    “It is not that I am mad, it is only that my head is different from yours.”
    Diogenes of Sinope

  • #65
    Ambrose Bierce
    “Cynic, n. A blackguard whose faulty vision sees things as they are not as they ought to be.”
    Ambrose Bierce, The Unabridged Devil's Dictionary

  • #66
    Diogenes of Sinope
    “It is the privilege of the gods to want nothing, and of godlike men to want little.”
    Diogenes of Sinope

  • #67
    Jeffrey Eugenides
    “All wisdom ends in paradox.”
    Jeffrey Eugenides, The Virgin Suicides

  • #68
    Jalal ad-Din Muhammad ar-Rumi
    “Know then that the body is merely a garment. Go seek the wearer, not the cloak.”
    Rumi

  • #69
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty
    “The body is our general medium for having a world.”
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Phenomenology of Perception

  • #70
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty
    “We know not through our intellect but through our experience.”
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty

  • #71
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty
    “Our view of man will remain superficial so long as we fail to go back to that origin [of silence], so long as we fail to find, beneath the chatter of words, the primordial silence, and as long as we do not describe the action which breaks this silence. the spoken word is a gesture, and its meaning, a world.”
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Phenomenology of Perception

  • #72
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty
    “To ask for an explanation is to explain the obscure by the more obscure.”
    Maurice Merleau-Ponty

  • #73
    Ambrose Bierce
    “The covers of this book are too far apart.”
    Ambrose Bierce

  • #74
    Thomas Ligotti
    “This is the great lesson the depressive learns: Nothing in the world is inherently compelling. Whatever may be really 鈥渙ut there鈥 cannot project itself as an affective experience. It is all a vacuous affair with only a chemical prestige. Nothing is either good or bad, desirable or undesirable, or anything else except that it is made so by laboratories inside us producing the emotions on which we live. And to live on our emotions is to live arbitrarily, inaccurately鈥攊mparting meaning to what has none of its own. Yet what other way is there to live? Without the ever-clanking machinery of emotion, everything would come to a standstill. There would be nothing to do, nowhere to go, nothing to be, and no one to know. The alternatives are clear: to live falsely as pawns of affect, or to live factually as depressives, or as individuals who know what is known to the depressive. How advantageous that we are not coerced into choosing one or the other, neither choice being excellent. One look at human existence is proof enough that our species will not be released from the stranglehold of emotionalism that anchors it to hallucinations. That may be no way to live, but to opt for depression would be to opt out of existence as we consciously know it.”
    Thomas Ligotti, The Conspiracy Against the Human Race

  • #75
    Thomas Ligotti
    “To my mind, a well-developed sense of humor is the surest indication of a person's humanity, no matter how black and bitter that humor may be.”
    Thomas Ligotti

  • #76
    Thomas Ligotti
    “Most people learn to save themselves by artificially limiting the content of consciousness.”
    Thomas Ligotti, The Conspiracy Against the Human Race: A Contrivance of Horror

  • #77
    Andr茅 Breton
    “The man who cannot visualize a horse galloping on a tomato is an idiot.”
    Andre Breton

  • #78
    Andr茅 Breton
    “Living and ceasing to live are imaginary solutions; existence is elsewhere.”
    Andre Breton

  • #79
    Katie Henry
    “You don't have a monopoly on suffering, okay?" I say, my voice rising. "Other people get to be mad about their lives. Your broken leg doesn't make my sprained ankle hurt any less.”
    Katie Henry, Heretics Anonymous



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