Quotesdtb.com
Popular Searches
Marcus Aurelius
Albert Einstein
Oscar Wilde
Mark Twain
Confucius
Plato
Authors
Topics
Quotes
Home
Authors
Quotes of the day
Top quotes
Topics
What she hadn't realized was that sometimes when your vision was that sharp and true, it could cut you. That only if you'd felt such fullness could you really understand the ache of being empty.
Jodi Picoult
Embed this Quote Image
×
Copy the code below to show this image on your website:
Embed code
<a href="https://www.quotesdtb.com/quote/12145568/jodi-picoult-ache-cut" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"><img loading="lazy" src="https://cdn.quotesdtb.com/img/quotes_images_webp/95/jodi-picoult-ache-cut-311695.webp" alt="What she hadn't realized was that sometimes when your vision was that sharp and true, it could cut you. That only if you'd felt such fullness could you really understand the ache of being empty. (Jodi Picoult)" style="max-width:1200px;width:100%;height:auto;border:0;display:block;" width="1200" height="630"></a>
Copy code
Code copied!
Add to your website
Related topics
ache
cut
empty
felt
sharp
vision
Related quotes
You are very familiar with western ways, but you are too young. You go everywhere to follow the big news, but the questions you ask are too simple - sometimes naïve. Understand, or not?
Jiang Zemin
...I finally understood what true love really meant. ...that love meant that you care for another person's happiness more than your own, no matter how painful the choices you face might be.
Nicholas Sparks
The thing is plain. All that men really understand, is confined to a very small compass to their daily affairs and experience to what they have an opportunity to know, and motives to study or practise. The rest is affectation and imposture.
William Hazlitt
I have never felt that anything really mattered by the satisfaction of knowing that you stood for the things in which you believed and had done the very best you could.
Eleanor Roosevelt
Much that we call evil is really good in disguises; and we should not quarrel rashly with adversities not yet understood, nor overlook the mercies often bound up in them.
Horace Mann