“Husband: ‘Just once I wish you’d admit I’m right!’ Wife: ‘Just once, I wish you’d admit you’re wrong!’ Husband: ‘Fine! I’m wrong!’ Wife: ‘Finally, something you’re right about!’”— Unknown, tcat.tc
“When you’re in a relationship, when you’re with somebody awful, I call that a relation-shit.”— Dane Cook, youtube.com
“Temple is an intensely moral creature. She has a passionate sense of right and wrong, for example, in regard to the treatment of animals; and law, for her, is clearly not just the law of the land but, in some far deeper sense, a divine or cosmic law, whose violation can have disastrous effects—seemi…”— Oliver Sacks, amazon.com
“We’ll pray to all the wrong decisions. This time, you’ll show all you can be. Grab your weapons now; we’ll run against the crowd and changing history”— Andy Biersack, open.spotify.com
“How come I end up where I started? How come I end up where I went wrong?”— Thom Yorke, open.spotify.com
“He was wrong for me. I was wrong for him. We were wrong. The timing had nothing to do with it.”— Lauren Jarvis-Gibson, thoughtcatalog.com
“We emotionally manipulated each other until we thought it was love.”— Warsan Shire, warsanshire.tumblr.com
“Remember everything is right until it’s wrong. You’ll know when it’s wrong.”— Ernest Hemingway, amazon.com
“I'm sure everything will be fine. I'm sure of lots of things that are wrong. I'm highly fallible.”— Night Vale podcast, twitter.com
“It takes great courage to see the world in all its tainted glory, and still to love it. And even more courage to see it in the one you love.”— Oscar Wilde, google.com
“He tried to prepare himself for disappointment, even as he yearned to be proven wrong.”— Hanya Yanagihara, amazon.com
“What we like to think of ourselves and what we really are rarely have much in common...”— Stephen King, amazon.com
“Saving you, is that what you think I was doing? Wrong-o. I just noticed that you were improperly packaged, my dear.”— Jeffrey Price, Peter S. Seaman, Jim Carey, The Grinch, Jim Carrey, imdb.com
“In a word, I was too cowardly to do what I knew to be right, as I had been too cowardly to avoid doing what I knew to be wrong.”— Charles Dickens, amazon.com