1.
You'll never regret eating blueberries or working up a sweat.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
2.
It's faith that really takes the courage, the belief in things unseen.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
3.
Friendship for me is made from a tapestry of personalities, each of whom shares a part of all I care about.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
4.
Cats regard people as warm-blooded furniture.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
5.
I do a great deal of research. I don’t want anyone to say, ‘That could not have happened.’ It may be fiction, but it has to be true.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
6.
Anybody can become a widow. There aren't any special qualifications. It happens in less time than it takes to draw a breath. It doesn't require the planning, for example, that it takes to become a wife or a mother or any of the other ritual roles of womanhood.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
7.
Work is a slice of your life. It's not the entire pizza.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
8.
The ideal structure for a family is one that remains so.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
9.
our sons and daughters are only passing through. ... If we are lucky, they always will consider our home their harbor, but they are headed out to the open sea, almost from the first.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
10.
Being wanted is the tender heel of everything human.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
11.
Here is how it is for women. We become our schedules. That starts to feel good. Then it starts to feel necessary. Then it starts to feel like everything.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
12.
Nothing better for the hormones and worse for the heart than the right boy at the right time.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
13.
Feelings change fast when you're a teenager.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
14.
When someone you love that much leaves you behind there isn't as much of you left to die when your own time comes.
Jacquelyn Mitchard
15.
There's a strange sensation - you recall it from childhood - about sleeping in the afternoon. You rise into a different world from the one in which you lay down. The shadows have been rearranged. There's a sensation of sad sweetness, as if something has been overlooked. I used to feel it coming out of the movies just before dinnertime, after the matinee. How, I wondered, did Broadway actors face it, this bittersweet sense of time's slipping past.
Jacquelyn Mitchard