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No Cure for Being Human: And Other Truths I Need to Hear

Kate Bowler

Top 10 Best Quotes

“I did not understand that one future comes at the exclusion of all others. Everybody pretends that you die only once. But that’s not true. You can die a thousand possible futures in the course of a single, stupid life.”

“...I had nothing to do but survive the feeling that some pain is for no reason at all. It became clearer than ever that life is not a series of choices. So often the experiences that define us are the ones that we didn't pick. Cancer. Betrayal. Miscarriage. Job loss. Mental illness. A novel coronavirus.”

“So often we are defined by the troubles that we live with rather than the things we conquer. Any persistent suffering requires being afraid. But who can stay awake to fear for so long?”

“Our lives are not problems to be solved. We can have meaning and beauty and love, but nothing even close to resolution.”

“And I didn't know how to say the future was like a language I couldn't speak anymore.”

“People say carpe diem. I mean, yes, unless you need a nap.”

“Sometimes the body is a weight pulling you the way down. And it's hard to love the stone that drowns you.”

“No matter the temperature, I insist that all impossible decisions must be made outside under the uninterrupted sky. How else could you know you're still alive?”

“It never occurred to me that every life must be constantly reinvented by adventures and private jokes, and that it might, suddenly, end.”

“I have another scan this week," I say lightly, hoping to reassure my loved ones that it is safe to rejoin my orbit. There is always another scan, because this is my reality. But the people I know are often busy contending with mildly painful ambition and the possibility of reward. I try to begrudge them nothing, except I'm not alongside them anymore. In the meantime, I have been hunkering down with old medical supplies and swelling resentment. I tried— haven't I tried? — to avoid fights and remember birthdays. I showed up for dance recitals and listened to weight-loss dreams and kept the granularity of my medical treatments in soft focus. A person like that would be easier to love, I reasoned. I try a small experiment and stop calling my regular rotation of friends and family, hoping that they will call me back on their own. _This is not a test. This is not a test._ The phone goes quiet, except for a handful of calls. I feel heavy with strange new grief. Is it bitter or unkind to want everyone to remember what I can't forget? Who wants to be confronted with the reality that we are all a breath away from a problem that could alter our lives completely? A friend with a very sick child said it best: I'm everyone's inspiration and and no one's friend. I am asked all the time to say that, given what I've gained in perspective, I would never go back. Who would want to know the truth? Before was better.”

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Book Keywords:

life-philosophy, death, beauty, die, choices, diagnosis, pain, cancer, chronic-pain, future, living, illness, live, nature, chronic-illness, body-and-mind, chronically-ill, self-help, decisions, sick, life, sleep, diagnosed, grief, love, truth, sky, language, sickness, planning-life, life-and-living, dying

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