Quotes From "Traveling With Pomegranates: A Motherdaughter Story" By Sue Monk Kidd

I now understand that writing fiction was a seed planted...
1
I now understand that writing fiction was a seed planted in my soul, though I would not be ready to grow that seed for a long time. Sue Monk Kidd
2
The words were unexpected, but so incisively true. So much of prayer is like that - an encounter with a truth that has sunk to the bottom of the heart, that wants to be found, wants to be spoken, wants to be elevated into the realm of sacredness. Sue Monk Kidd
3
Whatever it is I'm born to do, my fear of failing at it has almost become greater than my desire to figure out what it is. Ann Kidd Taylor
4
I wonder: instead of retreating and hiding, instead of pining for the way it was, what if I accept the way it is? This strikes me as both the most obvious thing in the world and the most profound. Ann Kidd Taylor
5
I wonder if that's the perennial story of writers: you find the true light, you lose the true light, you find it again. And maybe again. Sue Monk Kidd
6
When is the impulse to help an adult child a wise intervention and when is it self-serving and prying? I have an uneasy feeling I will have to carry the question around for a while like some grating pebble in my shoe. Sue Monk Kidd
7
It shocks me how I wish for...what is lost and cannot come back. Sue Monk Kidd