
“My mom used to tell me that whatever you do, marry someone who loves you more than you love him.”
Emma Harris, Chapter 19, p. 202
2000s, The Guardian (2003)
Source: Bone Crossed
“My mom used to tell me that whatever you do, marry someone who loves you more than you love him.”
Emma Harris, Chapter 19, p. 202
2000s, The Guardian (2003)
'Krishnamurti Foundation Trust Bulletin 3 (1969), and Krishnamurti Foundation Trust Bulletin 4, (1969)
1960s
Context: Can't you fall in love and not have a possessive relationship? I love someone and she loves me and we get married — that is all perfectly straightforward and simple, in that there is no conflict at all. (When I say we get married I might just as well say we decide to live together — don't let's get caught up in words.) Can't one have that without the other, without the tail as it were, necessarily following? Can't two people be in love and both be so intelligent and so sensitive that there is freedom and absence of a centre that makes for conflict? Conflict is not in the feeling of being in love. The feeling of being in love is utterly without conflict. There is no loss of energy in being in love. The loss of energy is in the tail, in everything that follows — jealousy, possessiveness, suspicion, doubt, the fear of losing that love, the constant demand for reassurance and security. Surely it must be possible to function in a sexual relationship with someone you love without the nightmare which usually follows. Of course it is.
“You can't hate someone until you know what it might be like to love them.”
Source: Vanishing Acts
“Rosie: Marrying someone you don't love is not right.”
Source: Where Rainbows End
Rolling Stone video interview of The Dead Weather (beginning at 1:50) "The Dead Weather Muse on the Future of Music, Supergroup War" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Llw9S1hMZ4s, Rolling Stone, April 17, 2010. Retrieved on January 5, 2015.
2010