Loading...
Logo Zenevenes
Login
Logo Zenevenes
  • Home
  • Games

    • Logo Termo/Wordle Termo - Wordle 🇧🇷
    • Logo Termo/Wordle Colmeia - Spelling Bee 🇧🇷
  • Quotes
  1. Quotes
  2. Categories
  3. turning-points
Back

Tough love and brutal truth from strangers are far more valuable than Band-Aids and half-truths from invested friends, who don’t want to see you suffer any more than you have.

Shannon L. Alder
truth reality honesty wisdom knowing learning freedom self-respect choices understanding values realism humility advice consequences openess actions life-changing gentleness teachers fighting-for-truth life-coach sugar-coated tough-love staying-positive good-advice stayingpositiveu-com group-therapy applying brutal-truth white-path your-not-alone swallowing-pride overcoming-ego keeping-it-real living-reality applied-lessons band-aids better-than-prozac blatant cold-reality downplaying eggshells faster-therapy half-truths helping-one-anothers interventions learned-lessons-from-others protective-family protective-friends right-as-rain rules-work say-it-like-it-is similar-paths slapping-sense-into-loved-ones tipping-points turning-points waking-up-friends

In any case, while it is all very well to talk of 'turning points', one can surely only recognise such moments in retrospect. Naturally, when one looks back to such instances today, they may indeed take the appearance of being crucial, precious moments in one's life; but of course, at the time, this was not the impression one had. Rather, it was as though one had available a never-ending number of days, months, years in which to sort out the vagaries of one's relationship with Miss Kenton; an infinite number of further opportunities in which to remedy the effect of this or that misunderstanding. There was surely nothing to indicate at the time that such evidently small incidents would render whole dreams forever irredeemable.

Kazuo Ishiguro , in The Remains of the Day
important past hindsight wistful turning-points

Naturally—and why should I not admit this—I have occasionally wondered to myself how things might have turned out in the long run.... I only speculate this now because in the light of subsequent events, it could well be argued that in making my decision...I was perhaps not entirely aware of the full implications of what I was doing. Indeed, it might even be said that this small decision of mine constituted something of a key turning point; that that decision set things on an inevitable course towards what eventually happened. But then, I suppose, when with the benefit of hindsight one begins to search one's past for such 'turning points', one is apt to start seeing them everywhere.... What would have transpired, one may ask, had one responded slightly differently...? And perhaps—occurring as it did around the same time as these events?

Kazuo Ishiguro , in The Remains of the Day
reflection reflective past regrets hindsight retrospect turning-points

...that was the one distinct time in my life, the strangest moment of all, when I didn’t know who I was—I was far away from home, haunted and tired with travel, in a cheap hotel room I’d never seen, hearing the hiss of steam outside, and the creak of the old wood of the hotel, and footsteps upstairs, and all the sad sounds, and I looked at the cracked high ceiling and really didn’t know who I was for about fifteen strange seconds. I wasn’t scared; I was just somebody else, some stranger, and my whole life was a haunted life, the life of a ghost. I was halfway across America, at the dividing line between the East of my youth and the West of my future, and maybe that’s why it happened right there and then, that strange red afternoon.

Jack Kerouac
adventure self-discovery growing-up life-experience haunted road-trip traveling american-culture who-am-i american-literature shadow-self lost-soul homesick turning-points quest-for-meaning strange-moment

Satan will tempt you with many things in life, but the most powerful is the temptation to be grateful for what you have, when it is not the best life God had to offer you.

Shannon L. Alder
mistakes marriage fear freedom decisions low-self-esteem settling jobs roads inaction scared satan misunderstandings careers tempt best-life turning-points false-gratitude

And so there must be in life something like a catastrophic turning point, when the world as we know it ceases to exist. A moment that transforms us into a different person from one heartbeat to the next. The moment when a lover confesses that there's someone else and that he's leaving. Or the day we bury a father or mother or best friend. Or the moment when the doctor informs us of a malignant brain tumor. Or are such moments merely the dramatic conclusions of lengthier processes, conclusions we could have foreseen if we had only read the portents rather than disregarding them?And if these turning points are real, are we aware of them as they happen, or do we recognize the discontinuity only much later, in hindsight?

Jan-Philipp Sendker , in The Art of Hearing Heartbeats
transformation life-changing-events turning-points
Zenevenes white icon
Política de Privacidade | Termos de Uso
Zenevenes.com © 2026