"I am still so naive; I know pretty much what I like and dislike; but please, don’t ask me who I am. A passionate, fragmentary girl, maybe?"
Lirios de agua
last-picture-show:
“ “Izis Bidermanas, Jeune Femme au Café, Boulevard St. Germain, Paris, 1969
” ”
'The little girl’s sense of secrecy that developed at prepuberty only grows in importance. She closes herself up in fierce solitude: she refuses to reveal to those around her the hidden self that she considers to be her real self and that is in fact an imaginary character: she plays at being a dancer like Tolstoy’s Natasha, or a saint like Marie Leneru, or simply the singular wonder that is herself. There is still an enormous difference between this heroine and the objective face that her parents and friends recognise in her. She is also convinced that she is misunderstood: her relationship with herself becomes even more passionate: she becomes intoxicated with her isolation, feels different, superior, exceptional: she promises that the future will take revenge on the mediocrity of her present life. From this narrow and petty existence she escapes by dreams.'
— Simone de Beauvoir, The Second Sex, Vol II Chapter II: The Girl  (via funeraryfaerie)
'She may have looked normal on the outside, but once you’d seen her handwriting you knew she was deliciously complicated inside.'
Jeffrey Eugenides, The Marriage Plot
(via wordsnquotes)