Morgan Rogers

  • Gabriela Carrillohar citeretsidste år
    “I didn’t have to have everything figured out. I wish I could turn off the part of my brain that needs perfectly executed plans, you know?”
  • Gabriela Carrillohar citeretsidste år
    “I think anything that waits and sings from the very bottom, the very pit of their stomach, is a very lonely creature indeed.”
  • Gabriela Carrillohar citeretsidste år
    “I think there must be a different song for each person. I think a siren must peer into the very soul of a lonely creature to understand what brings them closer. What song makes lonely creatures step further, toes then ankles then knees and deeper, until they are nothing but a sinking thing that a song can no longer reach?
  • Gabriela Carrillohar citeretsidste år
    “God, I sound lovesick tonight, listeners. I met a girl, and when you meet a girl, you think too much, you know? But I hope she is listening. And I hope she knows next time is soon, and I have not forgotten that it is my turn.”
  • Gabriela Carrillohar citeretsidste år
    You may have to make a lot of noise, and the universe’s silence can be oppressive and thick. But you want them to hear you, and they will. So do not, not even for one second, stop making noise
  • Gabriela Carrillohar citeretsidste år
    “So, we were halved. Broken into pieces. According to Plato, and echoed through Aristophanes, it does explain that feeling. It explains why humans sometimes spend their whole lives looking for their other halves, and why we try so hard to fuse ourselves into one. Perhaps it is because we once were exactly that. One.”
  • Gabriela Carrillohar citeretsidste år
    “People may not believe the stories,” she says, pink mouth cracking open with a yawn, “but that doesn’t mean they aren’t real.”
  • Gabriela Carrillohar citeretsidste år
    Yuki is able to find humanity in monsters, or maybe she gives monsters their humanity back.
  • Gabriela Carrillohar citeretsidste år
    grandmother didn’t know was that years later, society would still create Yamauba. We would still be seen as dark, terrible things simply for refusing to fit a particular narrative. Perhaps the truly terrifying thing is to step away from what you’re supposed to do and what you have planned. Perhaps you, the monster that you are, find yourself feeding on what you could not bear yourself.

    “Perhaps Yamauba were created because we did not want to name something we brought forth with our own hands,” Yuki says. “Perhaps flesh-eating monsters are simply people who break their molds and their boxes, and find themselves demanding all they have been denied.”
  • Gabriela Carrillohar citeretsidste år
    “Too many white people,”
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