top of page
"If you're going to be able to look back on something and laugh about it, you might as well laugh about it now."
Now,
Standard
Customized
More

"Most everyone now personally knows someone who is openly homosexual."
Author Name
Personal Development

"I am now seventy, rather glad, really, that I won't live to see the horrors to come in the 21st century."
Author Name
Personal Development

"Students now arrive at the university ignorant and cynical about our political heritage, lacking the wherewithal to be either inspired by it or seriously critical of it."
Author Name
Personal Development

"One hundred and ten years from now no one who is here now will be alive."
Author Name
Personal Development

"There's a part of me that wishes I'd never said one single solitary word on any subject publicly. Then I could have been the tortured poet, and there's so much mileage in that. But it's too late to stop now."
Author Name
Personal Development

"For instance, it's a little better now than it was two or three years ago, but something like 70% of the poems I receive seem to be written in the present indicative."
Author Name
Personal Development

"If you have tears, prepare to shed them now."
Author Name
Personal Development

"I take responsibility for myself and what I do now."
Author Name
Personal Development

"I was probably just trying to be Dennis Miller, but without the vocabulary to actually be Dennis Miller. I guess I was just less interesting than I am now, if I am interesting at all."
Author Name
Personal Development

"I don't like directors that just say, Stand there and now do this."
Author Name
Personal Development
More

"If you're going to be able to look back on something and laugh about it, you might as well laugh about it now."
Now

"I found for me that my safe place was work. I could control my environment. I became very fastidious and detailed, and wanted things a certain way."
Work

"I didn't know my mother had it. I think a lot of women don't know their mothers had it; that's the sad thing about depression. You know, you don't function anymore. You shut down. You feel like you are in a void."
Woman

"What basically happens is your hormones get out of whack. Because of the stress in your life your body says, 'I need more hormones.' So, your hormones are trying to produce and produce and produce, and it's even more stressful and it is this wicked cycle."
Life

"We know well and we know chronically ill, but there is a whole bunch of gray in between where I think we can heal people before they become chronically sick. I believe our thoughts make us sick."
People

"You just need to be honest with how you're feeling. But, a lot of women are afraid of it because they think, 'Oh, they are going to take my baby away. They're gonna call me incompetent. I'm going to lose my job. I've got to be tough, it's a man's world.'"
Woman

"This is a serious, serious condition that is also called postpartum psychosis. And that's where, literally, you get so bad that you end up either hurting the baby or killing yourself."
Baby

"There are some great questions to ask your doctor. If he says 'no,' then you find yourself a different doctor. There really has to be a change in how we medically look at women at this time. I mean, this is not just baby gloom."
Change

"Little things in my past that I really thought were over and done with were still elements of the puzzle that weren't pieced together, and so she helped me do that."
Thought

"I did a book signing when we were in New York the day before yesterday. A lady came through and she was just weeping, and said, 'I wish this would have been brought out sooner, my sister is in prison for suffocating her child.'"
Sister
bottom of page