10 Quotes & Sayings By Rufi Thorpe

Rufi Thorpe is a writer, activist, creator of the #reclaimthemedia movement, and the author of several books. "I write to make people care. I'm writing because caring is how human beings thrive. It's what makes us human." Rufi's work has appeared in The Guardian , The Washington Post , Salon , Huffington Post, Bill Moyers Journal , Womens eNews , Black Girl Dangerous, Essence Magazine, Yahoo News , The Daily Kos, Truthdig , The Root, New America Media , Al Jazeera English, Truthout.org , The Wall Street Journal's Book Review Blog , The Huffington Post's Politics Blog , The Progressive Magazine blog, AlterNet , Counterpunch Read more

He was a staff editor at Colorlines.com. He writes regularly for the Huffington Post where he writes about media rights and racial justice. His work has also appeared in Ebony Magazine and Jet Magazine

1
She carried herself like a dishonored queen. Even the way she held her head at an angle as she considered the buildings around us seemed watched and pretentious, and I thought about my mother saying there was something toxic about being very beautiful. It must be terrible to be a woman. Rufi Thorpe
2
Sure, and fatherhood is super important too. I'm not trying to make this a women-only club by any means. Just that even men rarely view their role in child rearing as the most important thing they do, when in fact it is clearly the most important thing that anybody does. Rufi Thorpe
3
Whatever it is that hurts you, don't talk to anyone about it. Rufi Thorpe
4
I finally did sleep for a little while, only it was like the difference between Pringles and actual chips, like someone took sleep and then put it through a horrible industrial machine, made it into a paste, and re-formed it and baked it into a shape that was supposed to look like sleep but was not anything even close. Rufi Thorpe
5
What aided the mind made the body suffer. They could choose mental health or physical health, but they could not have both. Rufi Thorpe
6
I'm just saying, when a woman in a maiden, she's in the spotlight. Everybody cares what a pretty, young girl does and says. And she's got some pretty strict archetypes to adhere to: Sleeping Beauty or Cinderella or Britney Spears. Pick your poison. But when you become a young mother? People don't give a fuck what you're doing. Their eyes glaze over before they even finish asking you. Once a woman starts doing the most important work of her life, all of a sudden, nobody wants to know a thing about it. . Rufi Thorpe
7
It wasn't that Lorrie Ann was becoming a Goody Two-shoes. It wasn't that she wanted to be perfect or loved or approved of. No. She wanted something much more dangerous. She wanted meaning. And she thought it could be gotten by following the rules. Rufi Thorpe
8
What had been so funny? But you can never remember what you were laughing about, and even if you could, it seems doubtful that it would still be funny. Rufi Thorpe
9
How could it be that I wanted those scary narrow streets and books and coffee shops for her so much more than she wanted them for herself? Rufi Thorpe