en

Nell Frizzell

  • linchanhas quoted2 years ago
    a second adolescence, not of new bleeding and breasts, but of self-awareness, maturity, and seriousness.
  • linchanhas quoted2 years ago
    When it ends, your heartbreak isn’t so much for a person as for something that never really was: an opportunity ripped away, a trick of hope you played on yourself.
  • linchanhas quoted2 years ago
    the reason I so single-mindedly tried to make incompatible men fall in love with me was because, deep down, I didn’t feel worthy of, or ready for, real commitment.
  • linchanhas quoted2 years ago
    when you feel unworthy of love—either as a result of rejection, trauma, a tricky childhood, whatever—it is amazing how forensically you can sniff out people who will not love you back.
  • linchanhas quoted2 years ago
    Without universal childcare, equal pay, and equal opportunity, it was impossible for me to approach my career, my fertility, and my future like a man.
  • linchanhas quoted2 years ago
    “Ah well, you know, it’s only because we count in a decimal system. If we counted around a factor of eight, you’d all just be freaking out about turning twenty-four, or thirty-two.”
  • Юля Кралевськаhas quoted2 years ago
    My stomach was wet mud.
  • Юля Кралевськаhas quoted2 years ago
    the grit and girth,
  • Юля Кралевськаhas quoted2 years ago
    that most of the people around me were also in flux, whether they were in relationships or not
  • Юля Кралевськаhas quoted2 years ago
    This is a problem if women are then made to feel that everything that happens during this time is somehow only our responsibility, ours to confront, carry, and resolve, alone. By adjusting women’s bodies with contraception and allowing men to live as eternal teenagers—uncertain jobs, short-term flings, adolescent hobbies—we have placed the burden of whether to try for a baby almost entirely at women’s feet. We shield men from the reality of fertility, family, and female desire, because we have been conditioned to consider them uninteresting or unattractive. Throughout my twenties and into my thirties, I tried desperately to appear casual and carefree, believing that any hint at my true, complicated desires—in my case, for love, commitment, independence, a successful career, and ultimately a baby too—would render me single forever. I silenced myself, because I thought it made me more attractive. I tucked my weaknesses, my wants, and my womb out of sight.
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)