45 Quotes About A Line Made By Walking

Everyone has their own unique way of doing things. Some prefer to walk, while others prefer to run. But the truth is, there are many different ways to get where you’re going. Whether you are on a trip, on a date, or just out shopping, feel free to use the best a-line-made-by-walking quotes below.

1
There's a table with some catalogues and a guest book in the corner; there are artworks. Today, I need so badly to be inspired by them, even though I hate that word: inspiration. It crops up in too many advertisements, politcians' speeches, Disney films, its meaning obliterated. I refuse to be 'inspired' in the same insipid way that ad executives and politicians and Hollywood producers suggest I should be. What I need from these works is to be reminded of why I used to care about art–so much that I'd try and make it for myself. Sara Baume
2
After college, I started working in the gallery and found myself surrounded by a whole new set of people who had not yet grown accustomed to my antisocial tendencies, who had not yet learned to expect me to say no, and stopped asking. I was invited to go drinking and dancing again, and so, I tried. Sara Baume
No matter how far I try to travel from people,...
3
No matter how far I try to travel from people, people always appear. Either they follow me, or they're already there, and I followed them, unwittingly. Sara Baume
4
.. . buzzed up by the knowledge that none of my family knew where I was, who I was with nor when I'd be home again. I didn't even know exactly who I was with or when I'd be home again or where home really was anymore. Sara Baume
In the face of immense tragedy–yet again–unexpected beauty.
5
In the face of immense tragedy–yet again–unexpected beauty. Sara Baume
How easy to be electrocuted. How fine the line between...
6
How easy to be electrocuted. How fine the line between beauty and peril. Sara Baume
7
I can't remember the name of the piece, or the artist. Maybe it wasn't even an artwork. Why must I automatically assume that every strange object is a sculpture, that every public display of unorthodox behavior is an act of performance. Sara Baume
8
I love that an idea can be so powerful it doesn't matter whether I've seen the artwork for real or not. Sara Baume
9
How I adored to draw as a child, a teen; all my life before I began to try and shape a career out of it. Sara Baume
10
Now I wonder if each artwork is in fact utterly inaccessible to everybody but the person to whom it is secretly addressed? Sara Baume
11
You can't dance to paintings. This is something Ben said, during one of our White Cube conversations, back when I was still wrong about him. He said it even though, at the time, he was desperately trying to be a painter. He said it because it was true and not because it was something either of us wanted to hear. Sara Baume
12
Art, and sadness, which last forever. Sara Baume
13
Blending into the tinctures and textures of the countryside. The tree which falls without any human hearing still falls, as the creatures who die without being found by a human still die. Sara Baume
14
I see foxes often, but always they are crossing fallow fields in the distance. Gold flecks on faraway expanses of green. Magnetic to the meandering eye. Enigmatic, unreachable. Sara Baume
15
My mother likes odd numbers and is suspicious of the even ones. She reads a new book every week and is bewitched by black holes in the universe. She describes herself as an optimist but she worries about everything–worries incessantly–worries on behalf of others when she feels they are not worrying adequately for themselves. And my mother misses her own mother, my grandmother, immensely, who only has a past now; who is only allowed to be as we remember her. . Sara Baume
16
I decided that if I didn't allow myself to fall asleep, then I wouldn't have to wake up again and despair. Sara Baume
17
There really isn't much wrong with me, ' I say, 'it's just that, well, I'm not like other people; I don't want the things they want. And this is not right, I mean, in other people's eyes, and I feel as though they feel they are duty-bound to normalise me, that it isn't okay just to not want the things they want, you know? Sara Baume
18
So it's as if, ' I say, 'I'm okay in my own bones, but I know that my bones aren't living up to other people's version of what a life should be, and I feel a little crushed by that, to be honest, a little confused as to how to align the two things: to be an acceptable member of society but to be able to be my own bones both at once. Sara Baume
19
But I know I will do neither; nothing. I have all the time in the world, and yet, I can't be bothered. Sara Baume
20
It happens so seldom; I must catch and keep this slender yearning, a rare beetle in a jam-jar trap. But mustering will is not the same as wanting. I lie in the garden and think about all the footsteps between my body on the grass and my pencil-case and notebook on the table in the sun room. All the muscles I have to flex and relax to get myself there. Sara Baume
21
And yet, here I am. Perceiving everything that is wonderful to be proportionately difficult; everything that is possible an elaborate battle to achieve. My happy life was never enough for me. I always considered my time to be more precious than that of other people and almost every routine pursuit–equitable employment, domestic chores, friendship–unworthy of it. Now I see how this rebellion against ordinary happiness is the greatest vanity of them all. Sara Baume
22
My mother says: 'People who suffer from anxiety are usually those with the most vivid imaginations. Sara Baume
23
And I felt like such a failure. I thought: I can't even do mental illness properly. Sara Baume
24
But no, now I see I never meant to Ben what Ben meant to me. If there was anything I said which resonated in return, he found a better speech elsewhere. My romance went no further than his coat. Sara Baume
25
People don't like it when you say real things. Sara Baume
26
Why is it only now that I can see how many ordinary things are actually grotesque? Sara Baume
27
I look at the cake in my mother's arms and think: here stands the only person in the whole world who'd go to such trouble for fractious, ungrateful me. Sara Baume
28
Did it do me any good, early in life, to believe so many things which were not true? Or did it damage me? Pouring a foundation of disappointment, of uncertainty. Sara Baume
29
I never went downstairs to join my housemates around the television. I cooked dinner later than everyone else and carried the plate up to my bedroom. I knew they must have thought me aloof, or a little bit eccentric, or maybe even unkind, but I didn't care. Once the kitchen door swung shut behind me, I was alone, and so everything was okay. Sara Baume
30
The old summer's-end melancholy nips at my heels. There's no school to go back to; no detail of my life will change come the onset of September; yet still, I feel the old trepidation. Sara Baume
31
But I have never wanted to be perceived as chatty and bright. I have always wanted to be solemn and mysterious. Sara Baume
32
But nowadays I feel guilty that I am granted the immunity of the artistically gifted, having never actually achieved anything to prove myself worthy. Sara Baume
33
Our toys were sixteen or seventeen; only the very eldest were in their early twenties, because, apparently, I didn't envision anything of particular interest in life beyond twenty-five. And now I am a greater age than any of the toys were allowed to reach, older than I even cared to imagine as a child. Sara Baume
34
In the days approaching Christmas, she always reminds me of the previous year: 'Jane crocheted you an entire poncho, and all you gave her was a bone-shaped beach stone. Sara Baume
35
I think: by the time I'm old, nobody will be able to die any more. Sara Baume
36
But now I remember, of course, I'm never going to be old. Sara Baume
37
And out the bus window, here is my dead world come true, my whole dead world in motion. Sara Baume
38
Sometimes things happen that give me cause to believe I no longer exist. Car park barriers which do not lift when I drive towards them, automatic doors which do not open automatically as I approach. Sara Baume
39
What bothered me was all of the time he wasted by drumming, and all the time I wasted by listening to him drum, by taking pleasure in it, for pleasure is almost always a waste of time. Sara Baume
40
This morning, the sun endures past dawn. I realise that it is August: the summer's last stand. Sara Baume
41
This morning, I see the lead in my glass tumbler. A slim, bright glint, a silverfish. I feel it collecting in my blood, papercutting the lining of my veins. Sara Baume
42
It's too warm for red wine; now I mix gin and tonics instead. I find they make the ordinary sensation of living lighter, less ruffled. Sara Baume
43
I know with unqualified certainty that I want to die. But I also know with equivalent certainty that I won't do anything about it. That I will only remain here and wait for death to indulge me. Sara Baume
44
I lie down and think about how this whole long, strange summer ought to end in a substantial event. But, probably, won't. For the first time I acknowledge the possibility that nothing will die, or change, or even happen. Sara Baume