logo

Quotes About Judgment

Did one act define who you were forever? Did one evil act as a teenager counteract twenty years of marriage, of good marriage, twenty years of being a good husband and a good father? Murder and you are a murderer. That was how it worked for other people. For strangers.
~ Liane Moriarty
Parents do tend to judge each other. I don't know why. Maybe because none of us really know what we're doing? And I guess that can sometimes lead to conflict.
~ Liane Moriarty
Samantha: Parents do tend to judge each other. I don't know why. Maybe because none of us really know what we're doing? And I guess that can sometimes lead to conflict. Just not normally on this sort of scale.
~ Liane Moriarty
She generally felt that the advice she offered was superior to the advice she received. Other people's problems were so simple; one's own problems tended to be so much more nuanced.
~ Liane Moriarty
Your inferiority was right there on display for the world to see.
~ Liane Moriarty
The problem is that Sophie would't want to date the sort of man who would want to date her.
~ Liane Moriarty
Why did she think tall people couldn't be crazy? Because they looked like they ruled the world?
~ Liane Moriarty
It was interesting how a marriage instantly became public property as soon as it looked shaky.
~ Liane Moriarty
It shouldn't matter. She knew it shouldn't matter. But the fact was that some people were so unacceptably, hurtfully beautiful, it made you feel ashamed. Your inferiority was right there on display for the world to see.
~ Liane Moriarty
You are awful people," she said loudly. The Blond Bobs looked up. Their eyes and mouths were little ovals of surprise. "You are awful, awful people.
~ Liane Moriarty
She realized she felt ashamed, as if by separating from her husband, she'd done something slightly distasteful and seedy,
~ Liane Moriarty
Like so many things in life, it had seemed like an excellent idea at the time.
~ Liane Moriarty
The fact was that some people were so unacceptably, hurtfully, beautiful, it made you feel ashamed. Your inferiority was right there on display for the world to see.
~ Liane Moriarty
She was twenty-five before it occurred to her that she could have insulted him back, but the rule of life was that the boys got to decide which girls were pretty; it didn't really matter how ugly they were themselves.)
~ Liane Moriarty
Her name was Susi, which seemed to indicate a worrying lack of judgment. Why didn't she call herself Susan? "Susi" sounded like a pole dancer. The other problem with Susi was that she appeared to be about twelve years old, and quite naturally, being twelve, she didn't know how to apply eyeliner properly. It was
~ Liane Moriarty
You don't know my age, you darling idiot, so how do you know I look great for it?
~ Liane Moriarty
It was interesting how a marriage instantly became public property as soon as it looked shaky. She
~ Liane Moriarty
You know, Madison, people are going to say mean things to you all through your life, and if you keep reacting like that, you're going to end up in jail.
~ Liane Moriarty
For Pete's sake, the girl went back to work three months after Jacob was born. It wasn't like having a baby would be that big an inconvenience for her.
~ Liane Moriarty
Parents do tend to judge each other. I don't know why. Maybe because none of us really know what we're doing?
~ Liane Moriarty
She would have thought she was too old to worry about her body being observed and judged in a swimsuit, but apparently this neurosis began at twelve years old and never ended.
~ Liane Moriarty
Now she was stuck in the pool because she didn't want to get out in front of him. She would have thought she was too old to worry about her body being observed and judged in a swimsuit, but apparently this neurosis began at twelve years old and never ended.
~ Liane Moriarty
She could not meet another brand-new group of mothers. She'd found socializing with the school mums difficult enough when her life was in perfect order. The chat, chat, chat, the swirls of laughter, the warmth, the friendliness (most mums were so very nice) and the gentle hint of bitchiness than ran beneath it all. She'd
~ Liane Moriarty
if an arm-less, leg-less woman on a skateboard could find a man, surely Sophie was doing something very, very wrong? How did this woman meet him? Pull on his trouser leg as she rolled by him in a nightclub?) Now
~ Liane Moriarty