Quotes About Perspective
I'm not crazy. My reality is just different from yours.
~ Unknown
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If people call you weird or different, then maybe you should take that as a compliment. It means they notice something about you that no one else seems to have.
~ Unknown
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At some point, your thoughts don't make you. Your experiences do.
~ Unknown
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Don't change who you are, change your perspective about life.
~ Unknown
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A change in the weather is sufficient to create the world and oneself anew.
~ Marcel Proust
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Facts do not find their way into the world in which our beliefs reside; they did not produce our beliefs, they do not destroy them; they may inflict on them the most constant refutations without weakening them, and an avalanche of afflictions or ailment succeeding one another without interruption in a family will not make it doubt the goodness of its God or the talent of its doctor.
~ Marcel Proust
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Much that for us is fraught with with happiness or misery, remains almost unnoticed by the rest of the world.
~ Marcel Proust
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You will find the Comte de Crisenoy," whom I had never lost, for the simple reason that I did not know him.
~ Marcel Proust
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We come to its aid; we falsify it by memory and by suggestion;
~ Marcel Proust
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It was not that Madame Santeuil's moral values had altered, but only her view of the moral values of others.
~ Marcel Proust
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Yes, I have been forced to whittle down the facts, and to be a liar, but it is not one universe, but millions, almost as many as the number of human eyes and brains in existence, that awake every morning.
~ Marcel Proust
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But then, even in the most insignificant details of our daily life, none of us can be said to constitute a material whole, which is identical for everyone, and need only be turned up like a page in an account-book or the record of a will; our social personality is created by the thoughts of other people.
~ Marcel Proust
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By an inverse gymnastic, I who had made a mental effort to add to Rachel all that Saint-Loup had added to her of himself, I attempted to subtract the support of my heart and mind from the composition of Albertine and to picture her to myself as she must appear to Saint-Loup, as Rachel had appeared to me. Those differences, even though we were to observe them ourselves, what importance would we attach to them
~ Marcel Proust
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Of course things have no power in themselves and since it is we who impart it to them, some middle-class school-boy might at this moment be standing in front of the mansion in the Avenue du Bois and feeling as I did formerly about the earlier one. And this because he would still be at the age of faith which I had left far behind;
~ Marcel Proust
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A photograph acquires something of the dignity which it ordinarily lacks when it ceases to be a reproduction of reality and shows us things that no longer exist.
~ Marcel Proust
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He who is in the wrong believes himself in the right, as was the case with Germany, and he who is in the right supports it with arguments which only appear irrefutable to him because they respond to his anger. In these quarrels between individuals, in order to be convinced that one of the parties is in the right — the surest plan is to be that party; no onlooker will ever be so: completely convinced of it.
~ Marcel Proust
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A cordial nature exaggerates a friend's qualities with as much pleasure as a mischievous one finds in depreciating them.
~ Marcel Proust
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social, and even individual differences are merged when seen from a distance in the uniformity of an epoch.
~ Marcel Proust
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A imobilidade das coisas que nos cercam talvez lhes seja imposta por nossa certeza de que essas coisas são elas mesmas e não outras, pela imobilidade de nosso pensamento perante elas.
~ Marcel Proust
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In reality, every reader, as he reads, is the reader of himself. The work of the writer is only a sort of optic instrument which he offers to the reader so that he may discern in the book what he would probably not have seen in himself.
~ Marcel Proust
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Other people are, as a rule, so immaterial to us that, when we have entrusted to any one of them the power to cause so much suffering or happiness to ourselves, that person seems at once to belong to a different universe,
~ Marcel Proust
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Possibly they knew better than I did that the Duchesse de Guise was Princess of Cleves, of Orléans, of Porcien, and so forth, but long before they knew all these names, they had known the Duchesse de Guise's face, which was subsequently what this name reflected back to them. I had begun with the fairy, even if she was soon fated to perish; they had begun with the woman herself.
~ Marcel Proust
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She was obliged, of course, to admit that Swann was not interested in money, but she would add sulkily: "It's not the same thing, you see, with him," and, as a matter of fact, what appealed to her imagination was not the practice of disinterestedness, but its vocabulary.
~ Marcel Proust
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Distances are only the relation of space to time and vary with that relation.
~ Marcel Proust
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