Quotes From "Sybil: The Classic True Story Of A Woman Possessed By Sixteen Personalities" By Flora Rheta Schreiber

You're never ready for what you have to do. You...
1
You're never ready for what you have to do. You just do it. That makes you ready. Flora Rheta Schreiber
2
There is no past. Past is present when you carry it with you. Flora Rheta Schreiber
3
Theirs was the eternal youth of an alternating self, a youth with the constant although unfulfilled promise of growing up Flora Rheta Schreiber
4
She'd abandoned the animal she loved as she herself had been abandoned repeatedly in the past by people who had claimed to love her. Flora Rheta Schreiber
5
Isolated, she managed somehow to feel free–albeit with a freedom that made her want to smash a hole in the very center of the universe. Flora Rheta Schreiber
6
The neurologist had dismissed her case after a single visit, handing out an easy nostrum by telling her father that if she continued to write poetry, she would be all right. Flora Rheta Schreiber
7
It all made sense – terrible sense. The panic she had experienced in the warehouse district because of not knowing what had happened had been superseded at the newsstand by the even greater panic of partial knowledge. And now the torment of partly knowing had yielded to the infinitely greater terror of knowing precisely Flora Rheta Schreiber
8
It is so much more threatening to have something out of hand than to believe that at any moment I can stop (I started to say "This foolishness") any time I need to. Flora Rheta Schreiber
9
After writing the letter Sybil lost almost two days. "Coming to, " she stumbled across what she had written just before she had dissociated and wrote to Dr. Wilbur as follows: It's just so hard to have to feel, believe, and admit that I do not have conscious control over my selves. It is so much more threatening to have something out of hand than to believe that at any moment I can stop (I started to say "This foolishness") any time I need to. When I wrote the previous letter, I had made up my mind I would show you how I could be very composed and cool and not need to ask you to listen to me nor to explain anything to me nor need any help. By telling you that all this about the multiple personalities was not really true I could show, or so I thought, that I did not need you. Well, it would be easier if it were put on. But the only ruse of which I'm guilty is to have pretended for so long before coming to you that nothing was wrong. Pretending that the personalities did not exist has now caused me to lose about two days. Flora Rheta Schreiber