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1 " You stayed around your children as long as you could, inhaling the ambient gold shavings of their childhood, and at the last minute you tried to see them off into life and hoped that the little piece of time you’d given them was enough to prevent them from one day feeling lonely and afraid and hopeless. You wouldn’t know the outcome for a long time. "
― Meg Wolitzer , The Ten-Year Nap
2 " Even if you yourself were unhappy and anxious, whenever you glimpsed happiness in your child, you suddenly became happy too. "
3 " It seemed that everywhere you went, people quickly adapted to the way they had to live, and called it Life. "
4 " To be anorexic...she thought, amounted to wanting to shed yourself of some of the imperfect mosaic of pieces that made you who you were. She could understand that now for, maybe underneath that desquamated self you would locate a new version. "
5 " But now the world, he thought, had taken them. He knew that this could suddenly happen. One day you just woke up, and there was somewhere that you needed to be. "
6 " Your personal history of pain, by the time you reached the age of forty, was supposedto have been folded thoroughly into the batter of the self, so that you barely needed to acknowledge it anymore. "
7 " Jill told him that he just didn't understand what it meant to have been so promising your whole life and now to be so disappointing in the end. "
8 " When you lived a certain kind of life, pushed along by good colleges and internships and jobs and a shared, tranquil neighborhood and a world of privilege in which your child overlapped, you were inevitably part of a long chain of connections. All of them could help one another; the possibilities were there if they wanted them, though many of them didn't seem to want them anymore, or maybe they had somehow forgotten they had once wanted them. "
9 " Maybe the idea of the supposed tension between working and nonworking mothers had been put out in the world just to cause divisiveness. "
10 " mostly they had to take pleasure in the moments that no one else would ever witness. "
11 " Their life together, which had its distinct rhythms and drama, was generally invisible to everyone else; sometimes she thought they were like performers in a flea circus between shows, doing their microscopic tricks only for each other. "
12 " She saw, briefly, the way the world rarely stopped to salute you or admonish you, regardless of what you had or had not accomplished. "
13 " ALL AROUND THE COUNTRY, the women were waking up. "