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Stories only happen to those who are able to tell them.
Paul Auster
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Interpretation

What this quote means

This quote emphasizes the importance of storytelling and the ability to convey experiences.

Paul Auster asserts that experiences and stories are only meaningful when they are articulated by someone capable of telling them. This highlights the significance of perspective and narrative in shaping our understanding of events, suggesting that storytelling is an art form that requires skill and insight.

Themes

StorytellingNarrativeExperiencePerspectiveArt

In practice

Example use cases

In a writing workshop to encourage participants to share their life experiences.

More from Paul Auster

Those of us who can remember our childhoods will recall how ardently we relished the moment of the bedtime story, when our mother or father would sit down beside us in the semi-dark and read from a book of fairy tales.
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He knew that his wings could ignite at any moment, but the closer he came to touching the fire, the more he sensed that he was fulfilling his destiny. As he put it in his journal that night: If I mean to save my life, then I have to come within an inch of destroying it.
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People look at the same passage, and one person will say this is the best thing he's ever read, and another person will say it's absolutely idiotic. I mean, there's no way to reconcile those two things. You just have to forget the whole business of what people are saying.
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Bodies count, of course - they count more than we're willing to admit - but we don't fall in love with bodies, we fall in love with each other. We all know that, but the moment we go beyond a catalogue of surface qualities and appearances, words begin to fail us, to crumble apart in mystical confusions and cloudy, unsubstantial metaphors.
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At that point, Noriko finally breaks down and begins to cry sobbing into her hands as the floodgates open - this young woman who has suffered in silence for so long, this good woman who refuse to believe she's good, for only the good doubt their own goodness, which is what makes them good in the first place. The bad know they are good, but the good know nothing. They spend their lives forgiving others, but they can't forgive themselves.
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Quote by Paul Auster | QuoteProject