Carolyn heilbrun quotes
Explore a curated collection of Carolyn heilbrun's most famous quotes. Dive into timeless reflections that offer deep insights into life, love, and the human experience through his profound words.
Shifting problems is the first rule for a long and pleasant life.
Why do long marriages occasionally endow their inhabitants with a rare kind of equilibrium otherwise almost unknown in human relations? My guess is that the value of the moment has at last overshadowed the long history of resentments, betrayals, and boredom.
Power is the ability to take one's place in whatever discourse is essential to action and the right to have one's part matter.
That is the point of quotations. One can use another's words to be insulting.
. . . a relationship has a momentum, it must change and develop, and will tend to move toward the point of greatest commitment.
A dog is the only exercise machine you cannot decide to skip when you don't feel like it.
Quoting, like smoking, is a dirty habit to which I am devoted.
A literary academic can no more pass a bookstore than an alcoholic can pass a bar.
The married are those who have taken the terrible risk of intimacy and, having taken it, know life without intimacy to be impossible.
To recommend that women become identical to men, would be simple reversal, and would defeat the whole point of androgyny, and for that matter, feminism: in both, the whole point is choice.
The compulsion to find a lover and husband in a single person has doomed more women to misery than any other illusion.
as the years go on a sense of deep patience comes over one; one seems to know the virtue of ripeness, and the danger of rushing events.
Women, I believe, search for fellow beings who have faced similar struggles, conveyed them in ways a reader can transform into her own life, confirmed desires the reader had hardly acknowledge-desires that now seem possible. Women catch courage from the women whose lives and writings they read, and women call the bearer of that courage friend. [p. 138]
You can flush my ashes down the toilet, for all I care.
We cannot guess the outcome of our actions... Which is why our actions must always be acceptable in themselves, and not as strategies.
Once you are thought selfish, not only are you forgiven a life designed mainly to suit yourself, which in anyone else would appear monstrous, but if an impulse to generosity should by chance overpower you, you will get five times the credit of some poor selfless soul who has been oozing kindness for years.
People who are genuinely involved in life, not just living a routine they've contrived to protect them from disaster, always seem to have more demanded of them than they can easily take on.
the term 'androgyny' ... defines a condition under which the characteristics of the sexes, and the human impulses expressed by men and women, are not rigidly assigned. Androgyny seeks to liberate the individual from the confines of the appropriate.
As long as women are isolated one from the other, not allowed to offer other women the most personal accounts of their lives, they will not be part of any narratives of their own…women will be staving off destiny and not inviting or inventing or controlling it.
Androgyny suggests a spirit of reconciliation between the sexes; it suggests, further, a full range of experience…it suggests a spectrum upon which human beings choose their places without regard to propriety or custom.
Androgyny suggests a spirit of reconciliation between the sexes.
Quoting, like smoking, ... is a dirty habit to which I am devoted. But then ... I am a professor of English literature; it is an occupational hazard.
Cynic' is the sentimentalist's name for the realist.
The journey is over. Love to all.
one sank into the ancient sin of anomie when challenges failed.
What marks a writer is this: until she - or he, of course - writes down whatever happened, turns it into a story, it hasn't really happened, it hasn't shape, form, reality.
... success always worries academics, when it moves into the popular world.
Life has this in common with prizefighting: if you've received a belly blow, it's likely to be followed by a right to the jaw.
Everyone likes to talk shop, which is the most interesting talk in the world, in the beginning.
New York is not like London, a now-and-then place to many people. You can either not live in New York or not live anyplace else. One is either a lover or hater.
Nostalgia is a dangerous emotion, both because it is powerless to act in the real world, and because it glides so easily into hatred and resentment against those who have taken our Eden from us.
We in middle age require adventure.
Normal is absolutely my least favorite word.
Thinking about profound social change, conservatives always expect disaster, while revolutionaries confidently anticipate utopia. Both are wrong.
Odd, the years it took to learn one simple fact: that the prize just ahead, the next job, publication, love affair, marriage always seemed to hold the key to satisfaction but never, in the longer run, sufficed.
Whether deliberately, unconsciously or accidentally, she seems to have composed her own life so that its fitful, rudderless, and self-doubting first half was alchemized into gold when the austere bluestocking became the fallen woman.
One cannot make up stories; one can only retell in new ways the stories one has already heard.
Male friends do not always face each other; they stand side by side, facing the world.
The rare, delicate flavor of a life after retiring in one's sixties, whatever one has "retired" from, the pleasure I experienced beyond my job at Columbia, is a gift of life in the last decades. but it is not easily learned. . . . But sometimes, the only way to live is to get out, or at least seriously to contemplate getting out, doing the impossible,flinging the conventional tea.
The sign of a good marriage is that everything is debatable and challenged; nothing is turned into law or policy. The rules, if any, are known only to the two players, who seek no public trophies.
Professors of literature collect books the way a ship collects barnacles, without seeming effort.
Whether animals admit it or not, they and I communicate.
It's hard to be happy, and safe, and applauded in a miserable world.
a revolutionary marriage ... [is] one in which both partners have work at the center of their lives and must find a delicate balance that can support both together and each individually.
Today's shocks are tomorrow's conventions.
Today's youth seem finally to have understood that only by freeing woman from her exclusively sexual role can man free himself from his ordained role in the rat-race: that of the rat.
Upon becoming fifty the one thing you can't afford is habit.
One hires lawyers as on hires plumbers, because one wants to keep one's hands off the beastly drains.
Most full lives are filled with empty gestures.
Only a marriage with partners strong enough to risk divorce is strong enough to avoid it.
I don't know why togetherness was ever held up as an ideal of marriage. Away from home for both, then together, that's much better.
Ironically, women who acquire power are more likely to be criticized for it than are the men who have always had it.
Ideas move fast when their time comes.
Power consists to a large extent in deciding what stories will be told.
Ardent, intelligent, sweet, sensitive, cultivated, erudite. These are the adjectives of praise in an androgynous world. Those who consider them epithets of shame or folly ought not to be trusted with leadership, for they will be men hot for power and revenge, certain of right and wrong.
maturity ... is letting things happen.
Is there any vanity greater than the vanity of those who believe themselves without it?
In former days, everyone found the assumption of innocence so easy; today we find fatally easy the assumption of guilt.
We women have lived too much with closure: "If he notices me, if I marry him, if I get into college, if I get this work accepted, if I get this job" -- there always seems to loom the possibility of something being over, settled, sweeping clear the way for contentment. This is the delusion of a passive life. When the hope for closure is abandoned, when there is an end to fantasy, adventure for women will begin.