11 Quotes by Meghan O'Rourke about Death
- Author Meghan O'Rourke
-
Quote
One of the grubby truths about a loss is that you don't just mourn the dead person, you mourn the person you got to be when the lost one was alive. This loss might even be what affects you most.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Meghan O'Rourke
-
Quote
Relationships take up energy; letting go of them, psychiatrists theorize, entails mental work. When you lose someone you were close to, you have to reassess your picture of the world and your place in it. The more your identity was wrapped up with the deceased, the more difficult the loss.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Meghan O'Rourke
-
Quote
What had happened still seemed implausible. A person was present your entire life, and then one day she disappeared and never came back. It resisted belief.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Meghan O'Rourke
-
Quote
Grief is paradoxical: you know you must let go, and yet letting go cannot happen all at once. The literature of mourning enacts that dilemma; its solace lies in the ritual of remembering the dead and then saying, There is no solace, and also, This has been going on a long time.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Meghan O'Rourke
-
Quote
Yet the story of Orpheus, it occurs to me, is not just about the desire of the living to resuscitate the dead but about the ways in which the dead drag us along into their shadowy realm because we cannot let them go. So we follow them into the Underworld, descending, descending, until one day we turn and make our way back.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Meghan O'Rourke
-
Quote
But now it seemed to me that Hamlet was moody and irascible in no small part because he is grieving: his father has just died. He is radically dislocated, stumbling through the days while the rest of the world acts as if nothing important has changed.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Meghan O'Rourke
-
Quote
So much of dealing with a disease is waiting. Waiting for appointments, for tests, for "procedures." And waiting, more broadly, for it--for the thing itself, for the other shoe to drop. Except in the waiting you keep forgetting that "it" will really happen--it's more like a threat, an anxiety: Will my love love me forever?
- Tags
- Share
- Author Meghan O'Rourke
-
Quote
I think: it's the holidays. There are parties. I'm young. I've spent the past two years going to oncologists. I'm going to put on my party shoes. And I do go to one party, and I leave when people start to dance around a pole. Later I start dating the man whose party it was, and he remembers being glad I came, and casually tells me how he flirted his head off that night. I'm not in your country, I think. I haven't lived in your country for a while.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Meghan O'Rourke
-
Quote
Death and the sun are not to be looked at steadily, La Rochefoucauld wrote.
- Tags
- Share