Kati Kaksonen > Kati's Quotes

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  • #1
    Gillian Flynn
    “I don't have anything else to add. I just wanted to make sure I had the last word. I think I've earned that.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #2
    Gillian Flynn
    “There's a difference between really loving someone and loving the idea of her.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #3
    Gillian Flynn
    “The ones who are not soul-mated – the ones who have settled – are even more dismissive of my singleness: It’s not that hard to find someone to marry, they say. No relationship is perfect, they say – they, who make do with dutiful sex and gassy bedtime rituals, who settle for TV as conversation, who believe that husbandly capitulation – yes, honey, okay, honey – is the same as concord. He’s doing what you tell him to do because he doesn’t care enough to argue, I think. Your petty demands simply make him feel superior, or resentful, and someday he will fuck his pretty, young coworker who asks nothing of him, and you will actually be shocked.

    Give me a man with a little fight in him, a man who calls me on my bullshit. (But who also kind of likes my bullshit.) And yet: Don’t land me in one of those relationships where we’re always pecking at each other, disguising insults as jokes, rolling our eyes and ‘playfully’ scrapping in front of our friends, hoping to lure them to our side of an argument they could not care less about. Those awful if only relationships: This marriage would be great if only… and you sense the if only list is a lot longer than either of them realizes.

    So I know I am right not to settle, but it doesn’t make me feel better as my friends pair off and I stay home on Friday night with a bottle of wine and make myself an extravagant meal and tell myself, This is perfect, as if I’m the one dating me. As I go to endless rounds of parties and bar nights, perfumed and sprayed and hopeful, rotating myself around the room like some dubious dessert. I go on dates with men who are nice and good-looking and smart – perfect-on-paper men who make me feel like I’m in a foreign land, trying to explain myself, trying to make myself known. Because isn’t that the point of every relationship: to be known by someone else, to be understood? He gets me. She gets me. Isn’t that the simple magic phrase?

    So you suffer through the night with the perfect-on-paper man – the stutter of jokes misunderstood, the witty remarks lobbed and missed. Or maybe he understands that you’ve made a witty remark but, unsure of what to do with it, he holds it in his hand like some bit of conversational phlegm he will wipe away later. You spend another hour trying to find each other, to recognise each other, and you drink a little too much and try a little too hard. And you go home to a cold bed and think, That was fine. And your life is a long line of fine.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl
    tags: love

  • #4
    Gillian Flynn
    “My gosh, Nick, why are you so wonderful to me?'

    He was supposed to say: You deserve it. I love you.

    But he said, 'Because I feel sorry for you.'

    'Why?'

    'Because every morning you have to wake up and be you.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #5
    Gillian Flynn
    “Tampon commercial, detergent commercial, maxi pad commercial, windex commercial - you'd think all women do is clean and bleed.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #6
    Gillian Flynn
    “Love makes you want to be a better man—right, right. But maybe love, real love, also gives you permission to just be the man you are.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #7
    Gillian Flynn
    “Friends see most of each other’s flaws. Spouses see every awful last bit.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #8
    Gillian Flynn
    “Because isn’t that the point of every relationship: to be known by someone else, to be understood? He gets me. She gets me. Isn’t that the simple magic phrase?”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #9
    Gillian Flynn
    “She’s easy to like. I’ve never understood why that’s considered a compliment - that just anyone could like you.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #10
    Gillian Flynn
    “We weren’t ourselves when we fell in love, and when we became ourselves – surprise! – we were poison. We complete each other in the nastiest, ugliest possible way.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #11
    Gillian Flynn
    “Because you can't be as in love as we were and not have it invade your bone marrow. Our kind of love can go into remission, but it's always waiting to return. Like the world's sweetest cancer.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #12
    Gillian Flynn
    “Can you imagine, finally showing your true self to your spouse, your soul mate, and having him not like you? So that's how the hating first began. I've thought about this a lot, and that's where it started, I think.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #13
    Gillian Flynn
    “Yes, I am finally a match for Amy. The other morning I woke up next to her, and I studied the back of her skull. I tried to read her thoughts. For once I didn't feel like I was staring into the sun. I'm rising to my wife's level of madness. Because I can feel her changing me again: I was a callow boy, and then a man, good and bad. Now at last I'm the hero. I am the one to root for in the never-ending war story of our marriage. It's a story I can live with. Hell, at this point, I can't imagine my story without Amy. She is my forever antagonist.

    We are one long frightening climax.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #14
    Gillian Flynn
    “He could cheat on me and he would never tell me, and he would think less and less of me for not figuring it out. He would see me across the breakfast table, innocently slurping cereal, and know that I am a fool, and how can anyone respect a fool?”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #15
    Gillian Flynn
    “All this time I'd thought we were strangers, and it turned out we knew each other intuitively, in our bones, in our blood. It was kind of romantic. Catastrophically romantic.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #16
    Gillian Flynn
    “It really is true. It took this awful situation for us to realize it. Nick and I fit together. I am a little too much, and he is a little too little. I am a thornbush, bristling from the overattention of my parents, and he is a man of a million little fatherly stab wounds, and my thorns fit perfectly into them.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #17
    Gillian Flynn
    “I still believed he'd love me again somehow, love me that intense, thick way he did, the way that made everything good.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #18
    Gillian Flynn
    “Something bad was about to happen. My wife was being clever again.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #19
    Gillian Flynn
    “Americans like what is easy, and it's easy to like pregnant women - they're like ducklings or bunnies or dogs. Still, it baffles me that these self-righteous, self-enthralled waddlers get such special treatment. As if it's so hard to spread your legs and let a man ejaculate between them.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #20
    Gillian Flynn
    “I am not okay. I will be okay, but right now I am not okay. I want my husband to put his arms around me, to console me, to baby me a little bit. Just for a second.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #21
    Gillian Flynn
    “I have never been a nag. I have always been rather proud of my un-nagginess. So it pisses me off, that Nick is forcing me to nag. I am willing to live with a certain amount of sloppiness, of laziness, of the lackadaisical life. I realize I am more type A than Nick, and I try not to inflict my neat-freaky, to-do-list nature on him. Nick is not the kind of guy who is going to think to vacuum or clean out the fridge. He truly doesn't see that kind of stuff. Fine. Really. But I do like a certain standard of living - I think it's fair to say the garbage shouldn't literally overflow, the plates shouldn't sit in the sink for a week with smears of bean burrito dried on them. That is just being a good grown-up roommate. And Nick's doing anything anymore, so I nag, and it pisses me off: You are turning me into what I never have been and never wanted to be, a nag because you are not living up to your end of a very basic compact. Don't do that, It's not ok to do.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #22
    Gillian Flynn
    “I didn't think past the first step of anything, that was the key. I drank a Coke and didn't worry about how to recycle the can or about the acid puddling in my belly, acid so powerful it could strip clean a penny. We went to a dumb movie and I didn't worry about the offensive sexism or the lack of minorities in meaningful roles. I didn't even worry about anything that came next. Nothing had consequence, I was living in the moment, and I could feel myself getting shallower and dumber. But also happy.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #23
    Gillian Flynn
    “Sometimes I feel like Nick has decided on a version of me that doesn't exist.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #24
    Gillian Flynn
    “I got it, Go said. Go home, fuck her brains out, then smack her with your penis and scream, There's some wood for you bitch!”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #25
    Gillian Flynn
    “Committing to Nick, feeling safe with Nick, being happy with Nick, made me realize that there was a Real Amy in there, and she was so much better, more interesting and complicated and challenging, than Cool Amy. Nick wanted Cool Amy anyway. Can you imagine, finally showing your true self to your spouse, your soul mate, and having him not like you? So that’s how the hating first began. I’ve thought about this a lot, and that’s where it started, I think.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #26
    Gillian Flynn
    “Because I realized I'd be stuck doing all the hard stuff," she reasoned. "All the diapers and doctors' appointments and discipline, and you'd just breeze in and be Fun Daddy. I'd do all the work to make them good people, and you'd undo it anyway, and they'd love you and hate me.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #27
    Gillian Flynn
    “And then you run into Nick Dunne on the Seventh Avenue as you're buying diced cantaloupe, and pow, you are known, you are recognized, the both of you. You both find the exact same things worth remembering (Just one olive, though.) You have the same rhythm. Click. You just know each other. All of a sudden you see reading in bed and waffles on Sunday and laughing at nothing and his mouth on yours. And it's so far beyond fine that you know you can never go back to fine. That fast. You think: Oh, here is the rest of my life. It's finally arrived.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #28
    Gillian Flynn
    “The old Amy, the girl of the big laugh and the easy ways, literally shed herself, a pile of skin and soul on the floor, and stepped this new, brittle, bitter Amy ... a razor-wire knot daring me to unloop her, and I was not up to the job with my thick, numb, nervous fingers. Country fingers. Flyover fingers untrained in the intricate, dangerous work of 'solving Amy'. When I'd hold up the bloody stumps, she'd sigh and turn to her secret mental notebooks on which she tallied all my deficiencies, forever noting disappointments, frailties, shortcomings.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #29
    Gillian Flynn
    “The good stuff in me I got from my mom. I can joke, I can laugh, I can tease, I can celebrate and support and praise – I can operate in sunlight, basically – but I can’t deal with angry or tearful women.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl

  • #30
    Gillian Flynn
    “To know exactly what I wanted to hear in those notes, to woo me back to her, even to predict all my wrong moves … the woman knew me cold. Better than anyone in the world, she knew me. All this time I’d thought we were strangers, and it turned out we knew each other intuitively, in our bones, in our blood.”
    Gillian Flynn, Gone Girl



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