Thaís

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Eu sou o monstro ...
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  (page 49 of 90)
Jul 17, 2025 01:03PM

 
I Who Have Never ...
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Apr 02, 2025 06:28PM

 
Relaçao e cura em...
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  (page 109 of 222)
Jan 24, 2025 05:50PM

 
See all 16 books that Thaís is reading…
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Toshikazu Kawaguchi
“I was so absorbed in the things that I couldn’t change, I forgot the most important thing.”
Toshikazu Kawaguchi, Before the Coffee Gets Cold

Anne Carson
“Sappho begins with a sweet apple and ends in infinite hunger.”
Anne Carson, Eros the Bittersweet

Marie-Louise von Franz
“Jung writes that women with a negative mother complex often miss the first half of life; they walk past it in a dream. Life to them is a constant source of annoyance and irritation. But if they can overcome this negative mother complex, they have a good chance in the second half of rediscovering life with the youthful spontaneity missed in the first half. For though, as Jung says in the last paragraph, a part of life has been lost, its meaning has been saved. That is the tragedy of such women, but they can get to the turning point, and in the second half of life have their hands healed and can stretch them out for what they want — not from the animus or from the ego, but, according to nature, simply stretch out their hands toward something they love. Though it is infinitely simple, it is extremely difficult, for it is the one thing the woman with a negative mother complex cannot do; it needs God's help. Even the analyst cannot help her — it must one day just happen, and this is generally when there has been sufficient suffering. One cannot escape one's fate; the whole pain of it must be accepted, and one day the infinitely simple solution comes.”
Marie-Louise von Franz, The Feminine in Fairy Tales

Virginia Woolf
“And of course she enjoyed life immensely. It was her nature to enjoy. Anyhow there was not bitterness in her; none of that sense of moral virtue which is so repulsive in good women. She enjoyed practically everything. If you walked with her in Hyde Park now it was a bed of tulips, now a child in a perambulator, now some absurd little drama she made up on the spur of the moment.”
Virginia Woolf, Mrs Dalloway

Celeste Ng
“One had followed the rules, and one had not. But the problem with rules... was that they implied a right way and a wrong way to do things. When, in fact, most of the time they were simply ways, none of them quite wrong or quite right, and nothing to tell you for sure what side of the line you stood on.”
Celeste Ng, Little Fires Everywhere

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