1.
My recovery from manic depression has been an evolution, not a sudden miracle.
Patty Duke
2.
Reality is hard. It is no walk in the park, this thing called life.
Patty Duke
3.
I've come to believe that whoever I am didn't start on December 14, 1946, and isn't going to end on whatever that mysterious date is in the future
Patty Duke
4.
It's toughest to forgive ourselves. So it's probably best to start with other people. It's almost like peeling an onion. Layer by layer, forgiving others, you really do get to the point where you can forgive yourself.
Patty Duke
5.
I can't tell you what I had for breakfast, but I can sing every single word of rock and roll
Patty Duke
6.
From the moment we walk out the door until we come back home our sensibilities are so assaulted by the world that we have to soak up as much love as we can get, simply to arm ourselves.
Patty Duke
7.
I tell people to monitor their self-pity. Self-pity is very unattractive.
Patty Duke
8.
When I'm 80 and sitting in a rocking chair listening to the Rolling Stones, there is absolutely no way I'm going to feel old or forget my younger days.
Patty Duke
9.
I still have highs and lows, just like any other person. What's missing is the lack of control over the super highs, which became destructive, and the super lows, which are immediately destructive.
Patty Duke
10.
Sometimes it is the simplest, seemingly most inane, most practical stuff that matters the most to someone.
Patty Duke
11.
Actors take risks all the time. We put ourselves on the line. It is creative to be able to interpret someone's words and breathe life into them.
Patty Duke
12.
All I will tell you is that I play a small role in someone's happily ever after.
Patty Duke
13.
If I have any message for others, it is to go for help early and not to be a resistant patient
Patty Duke
14.
I think my real depressions started when I was about 16 and doing The Patty Duke Show. I would go to bed at about 10 o'clock on a Friday night and not get up again until 6:30 Monday morning
Patty Duke
15.
You can have manic depression without having an ounce of creativity
Patty Duke
16.
The mania started with insomnia and not eating and being driven, driven to find an apartment, driven to see everybody, driven to do New York, driven to never shut up.
Patty Duke
17.
I have a picture of myself in my mind as I walk around every day, until I look in the mirror-and then I'm stunned
Patty Duke
18.
The Eleanor Roosevelt Award that I received for women's rights activities is one I treasure
Patty Duke
19.
I never did quite fit the glamour mode. It is life with my husband and family that is my high now.
Patty Duke
20.
The panic attacks - I still have them. They started when I was around 8. They always have to do with my death
Patty Duke
21.
I knew from a very young age that there was something very wrong with me
Patty Duke
22.
I'm going to be 58, and I'm a woman. In this business, that seems to be a bigger crime than being mentally ill
Patty Duke
23.
I know that without treatment I would not have never been able to harness my creativity in such a successful way.
Patty Duke
24.
For the first time, I lived alone... in a luxury apartment on Sunset Strip. For a few days I loved the idea, but I got lonely and restless.
Patty Duke
25.
Human beings have speculated about the relationship between inspiration and insanity for centuries.
Patty Duke
26.
No matter what your laundry list of requirements in choosing a mate, there has to be an element of good luck and good fortune and good timing.
Patty Duke
27.
I'm not sure I want all my neuroses cleared up
Patty Duke
28.
I joke around a lot about the manic times because they're funny. We manics do outrageous things and it is part of our colorful nature.
Patty Duke
29.
Women who put on a few pounds after starting lithium sometimes say the cure is worse than the disease. The weight gain shoots them straight into depression.
Patty Duke
30.
We have developed this unbelievable ability to deny. We have to. If we didn't, we'd go crazy.
Patty Duke
31.
I believe that all the important people in my life prior to 1982 were victimized by my illness
Patty Duke
32.
I was just sort of moving through time.
Patty Duke
33.
I can't even remember how many times I tried to kill myself
Patty Duke
34.
I'm living out a childhood fantasy. Our house is in a historic district of a small town that I used to read about in storybooks
Patty Duke
35.
... I went through a very lethargic period ... I was just sort of getting through every night and every day.
Patty Duke
36.
I had been very close to Anne Bancroft when we worked together in The Miracle Worker
Patty Duke
37.
When I don't know what the music is going to be for a scene, I imagine some sort of orchestration going on and damned if they don't usually come up with a similar kind of thing.
Patty Duke
38.
I have been afraid all my life that I am going to die. All my life it has been stuffed in my imagination
Patty Duke
39.
The doctors must tell you that one of the risks of surgery is that you might die. This poor doctor was talking to an actress. It was very dramatic to me. To him, it was just a thing he had to say
Patty Duke
40.
We call my son's role in the "Lord of the Rings" trilogy Sean's little independent movie.
Patty Duke
41.
One of the things I've discovered in general about raising kids is that they really don't give a damn if you walked five miles to school.
Patty Duke
42.
I have two books that were published quite some time ago. I start to read about three sentences. I have to close it. I am so self-conscious. Who did I think I was?
Patty Duke
43.
I kind of like the position of being the fair-haired savior of my mother
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