“People had a habit of looking at me as if I were some kind of mirror instead of a person. They didn't see me, they saw their own lewd thoughts, then they white-masked themselves by calling me the lewd one.”
            Variant: People had a habit of looking at me as if I were some kind of mirror instead of a person. They didn't see me, they saw their own lewd thoughts, then they white-masked themselves by calling me the lewd one. 
Source: On Being Blonde (2007), p. 54
        
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Marilyn Monroe 149
American actress, model, and singer 1926–1962Related quotes
Wallace Brett Donham (1952). Administration and blind spots: the biography of an adventurous idea. p. 3
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                        
                                        Source: Generation Loss (2007), Ch. 1 
Context: I had from earliest childhood a sense that there was no skin between me and the world. I saw things other people didn't see. Hands that slipped through the gaps in the air like falling leaves; a jagged outline like a branch but there was no branch and no tree. In bed at night I heard a voice repeating my name in a soft, insistent monotone. Cass. Cass. Cass. My father took me to a doctor, who said I'd grow out of it. I never did, really.
                                    
 
                            
                        
                        
                        “I didn't know that other people thought things about me. I didn't know that they looked.”
Source: The Perks of Being a Wallflower
 
                            
                        
                        
                        19 March 2018 Wynne demonizes old, white voters in grasp for votes http://torontosun.com/opinion/columnists/agar-wynne-demonizes-old-white-voters-in-grasp-for-votes
 
                            
                        
                        
                        
                                
                                    “He's somewhat lewd; but a well-meaning mind;
Weeps much; fights little; but is wond'rous kind.”
                                
                                
                                
                                
                            
                                        
                                        Prologue 
All for Love (1678)
                                    
                                        
                                         Interview with David Lander http://www.stereophile.com/interviews/1101ivor. Stereophile, 30 November 2003. 
2003
                                    
 
                            
                        
                        
                        Source: Poems of Fernando Pessoa
 
        
     
                             
                            