15 Quotes & Sayings By Sarah Moore Fitzgerald

Sarah Moore Fitzgerald is a published poet, essayist, and translator. She holds a BA from the University of California, Santa Barbara and a Master's in English from the University of California, San Diego. She has been a contributing writer for Cosmopolitan Magazine since 1996, as well as for Salon.com, The Village Voice, The American Poetry Review, Poets & Writers, and the National Poetry Review. Her first collection of poetry, Lullabies for Lost Children (in collaboration with her sister), was released by Calico Press in 2013.

1
Another thing about Oscar is that he wasn’t afraid of anyone. And he always made up his own mind, no matter what other people said. They’re two of the best things I remember about him now. He wasn’t just my friend. He was kind of magic. I can’t really explain it better than that. He was honest and he was decent and he was always cheerful. And evem though his brother Stevie had to use a wheelchair, it wasn’t a problem the way people usually think it is, because Oscar always made sure that every door was opened and every stairway had a ramp, and every train station had the right access so he could get it. He used to say that if the world was designed properly, the whole population would be flying around the place in wheelchairs. And when he said that, Stevie used to laugh. . Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
2
Oscar had a straightforward, dimpled, happy smile. It was one of the hundreds of great things about him. And after that we were best friends. It had been as simple and inevitable as the striking of a match. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
3
What am I going to do without you, Oscar?’‘You’ll be fine’, I answered. ‘You could probably do some time away from me. I’m a pain in the neck. You’re always saying so.’‘ You’re right, ’ she said. ‘It’ll be great to have you out of my hair for a few months.’‘ Oscar, seriously though.’‘ What?’‘ Stay in touch, will you? Please?’‘Of course I will.’‘ Promise?’‘ Yes, I promise.’‘ Good, because I’m really going to miss you. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
4
I don’t remember now who took the photo of us, but I’ve had it in my room for years. We’re leaning out of our windows and we’re laughing at each other with joyfulness purer than anything to do with the polite smiling you get used to doing when you get older. The photo has the kind of proper smiles that happen when you’re looking straight into the face of someone who’s been your best friend for a long time. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
5
I’d never have predicted I would lose touch with him — before, that is, I did. I thought I had my reasons. But it turns out that they weren’t good reasons. It turns out that you should never lose contact with the people who are supposed to be important in your life. There is no excuse in doing that. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
6
Peace can be fragile and peace can be ugly and peace can be wrong. Peace built on lies is no peace at all. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
7
I know what you might be thinking here on your own, but those thoughts won’t last for ever, ’ I said. ‘You won’t always feel like this. This will pass. Homer will be here for you, and the sun will rise and you’ll find your reasons again. The ones you think have deserted you. Isn’t that right, Meg? Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
8
The truth a fairly important thing to hold on to when you’ve been pulled out of the sea after wanting to drown in it. I could’ve let the sea take me. I could easily be dead now, which is funny when you think of it. When I say funny, what I actually mean is weird and kind of disturbing. When there’s the loud sound of a siren screaming in your head it doesn’t take too long before a feeling of not caring what happens washed over you and you become recklessly self- destructive. I used to be full of energy and happiness but I could barely remember those kinds of feelings. The cheerful, childish things I used to think had been replaced. A whole load of new realisations had begun to grow inside me like tangled weeds, and they were starting to kill me. That’s why I’d make the decision that involved heading ogg to the pier on my pike in the middle of the night and cycling off it. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
9
I steered by self as evenly as I could, and it was easier than I thought. My bike and I went shooting off the end, and together we well into the sea that’s cold and huge and doesn’t care whether living boys launch themselves into it or not. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
10
People often ignore the misfortune of others, you see. The world is a heartless place but it's not always because they don't care. It's sometimes because the are embarrassed, or because they don't know what to say, or because they simply cannot beat ro look into the eyes of someone who is suffering. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
11
Deary me, boys, why? Why would someone with so much going for him have.. have.. ended it all in the way he appears to have done? 'Oh father, you see, it could be for any number of reasons , ' Andy said, serious and fluent, as if he was an expert on the subject. 'Personally I think it's a miracle that any of us survives.' What do you mean? said the Priest.'I mean' continued Andy, 'there's this one moment as you're growing up when the world suddenly feels more or less pointless- when the terribleness of reality lands on you, like something falling from the sky.'' Something falling? Like what? asked Father Frank, trying his best.' Something big, like a piano, say, or a fridge. And when that happens, there's no going back to the time when it hadn't landed on you.'‘ But what about the pleasures and the joy and the purpose, like sport, music, girls and the like?’ Father Frank was nearly pleading now.‘ Fiction, ’ sighed Andy. ‘Mirages in the desert of life, to make people feel like it might be worth it.’ ‘Oh, ’ said Father Frank. ‘Oh I see, and do all you youngsters get this feeling?’‘ Yes, I think so, ’ said Andy, not even asking anyone else for their opinion, but most of us learn to live with it.’‘ Well that’s a relief, I suppose. . Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
12
I could feel something that I hadn’t felt for a long time. Something quiet and difficult to spot, but it was the feeling that you get when someone is listening to you. Really listening carefully. And it makes you want to tell things exactly the right way. It makes you want to take your time and explain, and get it right. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
13
Oscar’s hobby was saving people. He used to save people all the time, and fix things that were broken and catch people when they were falling. It wasn’t a skill you’d immediately know about or notice. Stevie said that Oscar had a gift and the gift was that he could smell things you wouldn’t imagine would smell of anything- things like sadness and desperation. Things like far and hopelessness. He never made a big deal about it, but he was quiet and confident — and when you believe in own abilities, you are much more likely to be always ready to act on them, which Oscar always was. Whenever I asked him about it, he claimed that his were not exceptional or extraordinary abilities in the slightest. Everyone, he said, is able to tell when someone is in need of help, but few people really take the time to listen to their instincts, and that, he said, was the only difference between him and a lot of other of people. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald
14
And she said that sometimes you wish for something very hard, it can kind of come true inside your own head, and it can seem real. Sarah Moore Fitzgerald