Yiyun Li

Dear Friend, from My Life I Write to You in Your Life

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  • Nataliahas quoted3 months ago
    What one carries from one point to another, geographically or temporally, is one’s self. Even the most inconsistent person is consistently himself.
  • Anaïs Ornelashas quoted4 months ago
    I am not an autobiographical writer—one cannot be without a solid and explicable self—and read all autobiographical writers with the same curiosity. What kind of life permits a person the right to become his own subject?
  • Anaïs Ornelashas quoted4 months ago
    For a while I read Katherine Mansfield’s notebooks to distract myself. “Dear friend, from my life I write to you in your life,” she wrote in an entry. I cried when I read the line. It reminds me of the boy from years ago who could not stop sending the designs of his dreams in his letters. It reminds me too why I do not want to stop writing. The books one writes—past and present and future—are they not trying to say the same thing: Dear friend, from my life I write to you in your life? What a long way it is from one life to another, yet why write if not for that distance, if things can be let go, every before replaced by an after.
  • Anaïs Ornelashas quoted4 months ago
    What if this emptiness is what keeps me going?
  • Anaïs Ornelashas quoted4 months ago
    t is either a dictator or the closest friend I have ever had
  • Anaïs Ornelashas quoted4 months ago
    There is this emptiness in me. All the things in the world are not enough to drown out the voice of this emptiness that says: you are nothing
  • Sandra Viviana Chisaca Leivahas quoted3 years ago
    In never leaving home, Moore found a shortcut in suffering, and she suffered impeccably. “Writing, to me, is entrapped conversation,” she wrote to Ezra Pound when he was in St. Elizabeths Hospital. I resent her for living an unhaunted life. I envy her for her entrapment. I can find no selfishness in her but her selfless art: sane, elegant, uncharitable.
  • Sandra Viviana Chisaca Leivahas quoted3 years ago
    Melodrama is never political. It’s not my responsibility to manipulate the memories of my characters. It is presumptuous of anyone, other than the characters themselves, to label their experience, or to impose meanings upon their memories. Characters who do so have agendas, yet they are not my agenda. My curiosity is to watch how memory, both as melodrama and as controlled narrative, lives on in time. Who among us dares to assert that our memories are not tainted by time, sweetest poison and bitterest antidote, untrustworthy ally and reliable annihilato
  • Sandra Viviana Chisaca Leivahas quoted3 years ago
    Willfulness is a strange optimist. It turns the inevitable into the desirable. If aloneness is inevitable, I want to believe that aloneness is what I have desired because it is happiness itself. It must be a miscomprehension—though I have been unwilling to give it up—that one’s life could be lived as a series of solitary moments. In between, time spent with other people is the time to prepare for their disappearance. That there is an opposite perspective I can only understand theoretically. The time line is also a repetition of one’s lapse into isolation. It’s not others who vanish, but from others one vanishes.
  • Sandra Viviana Chisaca Leivahas quoted3 years ago
    To defy any political authority, to endanger myself in a righteous way, to use my words to distinguish this self from people around me—these, at eighteen, were shortcuts to what I really wanted: confirmation that life, bleak and unjust, was not worth living
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