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Rebecca Wells Quotes

Rebecca Wells Quotes
1.
It's life. You don't figure it out. You just climb up on the beast and ride.
Rebecca Wells

2.
Maybe people are more like the earth than we know. Maybe they have fault lines that sooner or later are going to split open under pressure.
Rebecca Wells

3.
Good enough is good enough. Perfect will make you a big fat mess every time.
Rebecca Wells

4.
Life is short but it is wide. This too shall pass.
Rebecca Wells

5.
I believe that illness has led me to a life of gratitude, so I consider Lyme disease at this point in my life to be a blessing in disguise.
Rebecca Wells

Similar Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson William Shakespeare Donald Trump Mahatma Gandhi Barack Obama Rush Limbaugh Henry David Thoreau Friedrich Nietzsche Mark Twain Rajneesh Cassandra Clare C. S. Lewis Albert Einstein Oscar Wilde Thomas Jefferson
6.
I think of myself as Rebecca Wells from Lodi Plantation, in Central Louisiana, a girl who was lucky enough to be born into a family that encouraged creativity and didn't call me lazy or nuts when I dressed up in my mother's peignoirs and played the piano, having painted a small sign decorated in glitter that read 'The Piano Fairy Girl.
Rebecca Wells

7.
How wide and sweet and wild motherhood and sisterhood can be.
Rebecca Wells

8.
A scent that disturbs me and delights me. It smells like ripe pears, vetiver, a bit of violet and something else- something spicy almost biting and exotic.
Rebecca Wells

Quote Topics by Rebecca Wells: Writing Book People Gratitude Want Girl Sometimes Sisterhood Sweet Heart Believe Depression Mean Bears Forget Life Forgiving Children Stories Mosquitoes Brave Harbors Cooking Knowing Suffering Stills Friendship Long Missing Shells
9.
I value humor, kindness, and the ability to tell a good story far more than money, status, or the kind of car someone drives.
Rebecca Wells

10.
I want to lay up like that, to float unstructured, without ambition or anxiety. I want to inhabit my life like a porch.
Rebecca Wells

11.
I never claimed to be a low-maintenance gal, but when I'm writing, it's particularly challenging. I lose things constantly: my watch, my glasses, my papers, my mind.
Rebecca Wells

12.
You know how some people, when they're together, they somehow make you feel more hopeful? Make you feel like the world is not the insane place it really is?
Rebecca Wells

13.
Friends are supposed to act like harbor boats-let you know if you're off course. But it ain't always possible.
Rebecca Wells

14.
These are all I have. I do not have the wide, bright beacon of some solid old lighthouse, guiding ships safely home, past the jaggedrocks. I only have these little glimmers that flicker and then go out.
Rebecca Wells

15.
Flowers heal me. Tulips make me happy. I keep myself surrounded by them as soon as they start coming to the island from Canada, and after that when they come from the fields in La Connor, not far from where I live.
Rebecca Wells

16.
Sadness can find you anywhere, anytime, so you better have fun when you can.
Rebecca Wells

17.
What they don't know is that I went over the edge years ago, and lived to tell the tale.
Rebecca Wells

18.
But who has time to write memoirs? I’m still living my memoirs.
Rebecca Wells

19.
At the beauty of what she had stumbled onto, at the fear that something terrible would happen because she was not vigilant enough. She cried at the fear of something so good that she would not be brave enough to bear it.
Rebecca Wells

20.
I swear I could write a book about all the things no one has ever thanked me for.
Rebecca Wells

21.
When I'm reading, wherever I am, I'm always somewhere else.
Rebecca Wells

22.
the process of a book's coming to life is not fully complete until your imagination meets mine on the page. The words evoke pictures and something altogether new is created, something different from the limits of my own skills and imagination. Something that is a marriage between your heart, mind, and body - and mine.
Rebecca Wells

23.
I have been missing the point. The point is not knowing another person, or learning to love another person. The point is simply this: how tender can we bear to be? What good manners can we show as we welcome ourselves and others into our hearts?
Rebecca Wells

24.
As a writer, I am not goddess of the universes I create. I am at most a stage manager of the plentiful gifts which tumble out of the horn of plenty, which is to say there is a source so sweet and forgiving and generous that I pray every day to let that source be my guide.
Rebecca Wells

25.
I now know that things I always thought I could depend on can crash in an instant. Because of the love that I have been shown, I now know what it means to be 'beloved.' I now know that no breath is to be taken for granted.
Rebecca Wells

26.
There is the truth of history, and there is the truth of what a person remembers.
Rebecca Wells

27.
Sometimes lost treasures can be reclaimed.
Rebecca Wells

28.
I am the kind of woman who loves hurricanes. They put me in a party mood. Make me want to eat oysters on the half shell, and act slutty.
Rebecca Wells

29.
we have to suffer mosquitoes the size of blackbirds.
Rebecca Wells

30.
Forget love. Try good manners.
Rebecca Wells

31.
The love we most cherish will, of necessity, bring us pain. Because that love is like the setting of a body with broken bones. But I want to stage the setting. I want to direct all scenes.
Rebecca Wells

32.
I believe that we are given strength and help from a power much larger than ourselves. I believe if I humble myself that this power will come through me, and help me create work that is bigger than I would have ever been able to have done alone.
Rebecca Wells

33.
Can you reclaim that free-girl smile, or is it like virginity- once you loose it, that's it?
Rebecca Wells

34.
Sometimes you just have to reach out and grab what you want, even when they tell you not to. This is something that I've struggled with my whole life long.
Rebecca Wells

35.
Don't ever admit you know a thing about cooking or it'll be used against you.
Rebecca Wells

36.
I come to writing from hearing great stories as a child in Louisiana, where the mark of a person was his or her ability to be a raconteur. I also come to writing as a professional actress whose body has been trained to listen and smell and inhabit characters without judgment.
Rebecca Wells