“We must always welcome the end of all things. For sometimes knowing nothing lasts forever is the only way we can learn to fall in love with all the moments, and all the people, that are meant to take our breath away.”— Robert M. Drake, amazon.com
“The idea behind a kaleidoscope is that it's a structure that's filled with broken bits and pieces, and somehow if you can look through them, you still see something beautiful. And I feel like we are all that way a little bit.”— Sara Bareilles, weheartit.com
“We all want that person who makes us calm in the soul and crazy in the flesh.”— Jm Storm, weheartit.com
“This tree of ours may grow tall in the woods but it's the roots that will bind us here.”— Ben Howard, open.spotify.com
“Hold your own Ropes won't hold Your soul Hope will grow Know you're not Alone”— The People's Thieves, open.spotify.com
“You came one day and as usual in such matters significance filled everything- your eyes, the things you knew, the way you turned, leaned, stood, or sat, this way or that.”— A.R. Ammons, goodreads.com
“They say the best part of life is the childhood, but I began backwards. My winter has just melted and the best is yet to come.”— Ani Shahverdyan, instagram.com
“I embrace the possibility that this earth we inhabit; it is just a different sky. A sky where we are hollow stars.”— Clairel Estevez, instagram.com
“I don't want smooth sailing; I want a rainstorm. 'Ordinary' is something we should all be running from.”— s.r.w poetry, instagram.com
“The heart is resilient, I mean literally. When a body is burned, the heart is the last organ to oxidize. While the rest of the body can catch flame like a polyester sheet on campfire, it takes hours to burn the heart to ash.”— Ibi Kaslik, amazon.com
“I believe that everyone in the world has one poem that is their soulmate.”— Nayyirah Waheed, amazon.com
“If the moon smiled, she would resemble you. You leave the same impression Of something beautiful, but annihilating.”— Sylvia Plath, amazon.com
“I hope that real love and truth are stronger in the end than any evil or misfortune in the world.”— Charles Dickens, amazon.com