Anais Nin
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Anais Nin
Anaïs Ninwas an essayist and memoirist born to Cuban parents in France, where she was also raised. She spent some time in Spain and Cuba but lived most of her life in the United States where she became an established author. She wrote journals, novels, critical studies, essays, short stories, and erotica. A great deal of her work, including Delta of Venus and Little Birds, was published posthumously...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionNovelist
Date of Birth21 February 1903
CityNanterre, France
CountryUnited States of America
Each friend represents a world in us, a world possibly not born until they arrive, and it is only by this meeting that a new world is born.
Last night I wept. I wept because the process by which I have become a woman was painful. I wept because I was no longer a child with a child's blind faith. I wept because my eyes were opened to reality...I wept because I could not believe anymore and I love to believe. I can still love passionately without believing. That means I love humanly. I wept because from now on I will weep less. I wept because I have lost my pain and I am not yet accustomed to its absence.
We are never trapped unless we choose to be.
Each contact with a human being is so rare, so precious, one should preserve it.
The secret of joy is the mastery of pain.
I am a winged creature who is too rarely allowed to use its wings. Ecstasies do not occur often enough.
I will not adjust myself to the world. I am adjusted to myself.
I love the abstract, delicate, profound, vague, voluptuously wordless sensation of living ecstatically.
I want to live darkly and richly in my femaleness.
Ordinary life does not interest me. I seek only the high moments. I am in accord with the surrealists, searching for the marvelous. I want to be a writer who reminds others that these moments exist; I want to prove that there is infinite space, infinite meaning, infinite dimension. But I am not always in what I call a state of grace. I have days of illuminations and fevers. I have days when the music in my head stops. Then I mend socks, prune trees, can fruits, polish furniture. But while I am doing this I feel I am not living.
The fiery moments of passionate experience are the moments of wholeness and totality of the personality.
Adolescence is like cactus.
Jazz is the music of the body. The breath comes through brass. It is the body's breath, and the strings' wails and moans are echoes of the body's music. It is the body's vibrations which ripple from the fingers. And the mystery of the withheld theme, known to jazz musicians alone, is like the mystery of our secret life. We give to others only peripheral improvisations.
I want to do things so wild with you that I don't know how to say them.