Aliya Whiteley

  • Genevieve Munteanmembuat kutipan10 bulan yang lalu
    and your cock will stop throbbing like
  • nyxdvesparmembuat kutipantahun lalu
    This loneliness I feel is of the womb, borne by women. I was sixteen when they all died and I thought I understood this loss, but it comes to me that I didn’t know what women gave to the world. It wasn’t about their lips, their eyes or the gentle quality of their voices. It was about the way that all men are a part of them. And now we are part of nothing
  • danamembuat kutipan4 bulan yang lalu
    There are signs of change, of regeneration, and I saw the first mushrooms in the graveyard on the morning after I ripped up the photograph of my mother’s face and threw the pieces over the cliff, into the fat swallowing folds of the sea.
  • danamembuat kutipan4 bulan yang lalu
    Language is changing, like the earth, like the sea. We live in lonely, fateful flux, outnumbered and outgrown.
  • danamembuat kutipan4 bulan yang lalu
    Today the world moves on, and I must find new ways to turn the truth into stories.
  • danamembuat kutipan4 bulan yang lalu
    Such thoughts about language cannot be scooped from brains anyway. This is why I say things I shouldn’t.
  • danamembuat kutipan4 bulan yang lalu
    To have someone who tells you what to do – sometimes this seems like a bad thing, and sometimes it doesn’t. Is anything forever? I’m thinking not.
  • CrushedUnderAStackOfBooksmembuat kutipantahun lalu
    This loneliness I feel is of the womb, borne by women. I was sixteen when they all died and I thought I understood this loss, but it comes to me that I didn’t know what women gave to the world. It wasn’t about their lips, their eyes or the gentle quality of their voices. It was about the way that all men are a part of them. And now we are part of nothing
  • CrushedUnderAStackOfBooksmembuat kutipantahun lalu
    Years passed. The orphan began to lose the sound of his mother’s voice and the movement of her mouth, the colour of her eyes, the feel of her hair. So he held tight to an old photograph, staring at it, carrying it with him, until he realised that the mother he knew had become only the photograph, an image of what a mother should be, and there were no real memories left
  • CrushedUnderAStackOfBooksmembuat kutipantahun lalu
    Silence. It is worse than pain. It is my mortal enemy. It kills me, cuts me up, that dread silence of despair. Even back then I couldn't bear it. I was sixteen years old and already an enemy of silence.

    And so I stood up and started to talk. Nothing important. Nothing real. What surprised me, as I retold the plot of the book I had just finished reading, in which a boy wizard defeated a great evil, was that nobody stopped me. I talked for hours, and people listened because they hated the silence too. They were happy to create it, and then terrified by what they made. And so I came to understand the split at the root of the soul of all men.
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