Peace Talks Quotes

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Peace Talks (The Dresden Files, #16) Peace Talks by Jim Butcher
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“Home, like love, hate, war, and peace, is one of those words that is so important that it doesn't need more than one syllable. Home is part of the fabric of who humans are. Doesn't matter if you're a vampire or a wizard or a secretary or a schoolteacher; you have to have a home, even if only in principle-there has to be a zero point from which you can make comparisons to everything else. Home tends to be it.
That can be a good thing, to help you stay oriented in avery confusing world. If you don't know where you feet are planted, you've got no way to know here you're heading when you start taking steps. It can be a bad thing, when you run into something so different from home that it scares you and makes you angry. That's also part of being human.
But there's a deeper meaning to home. Something simpler, more primal. It's where you eat the best food because other predators can't take it from you very easily there. It's where you can your mate are the most intimate. Its where your raise your children, safe against a world that can be horrible things to them. It's where you sleep, safe. It's where you relax. It's where you dream. Home is where you embrace the present and plan the future. It's where the books are. And more than anything else, it's where you build the world that you want.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
tags: home
“Sometimes the best defense is a T.rex.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Fear is a prison. But when you combine it with secrets, it becomes especially toxic, vicious. It puts us all into solitary, unable to hear one another clearly.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“At the end of the day, people have to be who they are. If you try to take that from them, you diminish them. You reduce them to children, unable to make decisions for themselves. There’s no way to poison your relationship with someone else faster.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“The pain we feel in life always grows. When we’re little, little pains hurt us. When we get bigger, we learn to handle more and more pain and carry on regardless.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
tags: pain
“You can’t go around making people’s choices for them. Not if you love them.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Only the young think being called old is an insult,” I said, still smiling. “I am what I am, regardless of what anyone calls it. No one can change it, regardless of what anyone calls it. And it mostly means that nothing has managed to kill me yet.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Ah, well. There was no sense in brooding over it. Life never stays the same. There’s always some kind of curveball coming at you. Nothing to do but swing away.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Some free advice for you: Never fight an old man. They’ve been there, done that, written the book, made and starred in the movie, designed the T-shirt, and they’ve got no ego at all about how the fight gets won.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Humans are scared of just about everything. Problem is, their first reaction to be scared- Is to kill it.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Yeah well, I’ve never had much opportunity to fight with family,” I said.
“I have,” she said. “Everyone cares about everyone else. So when you get mad and say something horrible, it hurts that much more. And too many things go unsaid. That’s the worst, I think. Everyone thinks they know one another better than they probably do, so you fill in the silences with things the other person never actually said. Or thought. Or thought about saying.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“But you can’t ignore things that are real just because they’re uncomfortable.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“The capacity of humanity to deny what is right in front of it is staggering.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“But there’s a deeper meaning to home. Something simpler, more primal. It’s where you eat the best food because other predators can’t take it from you very easily there. It’s where you and your mate are the most intimate. It’s where you raise your children, safe against a world that can do horrible things to them. It’s where you sleep, safe. It’s where you relax. It’s where you dream. Home is where you embrace the present and plan the future. It’s where the books are. And more than anything else, it’s where you build that world that you want.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“And you both hurt each other terribly, because you’re family. Because what you say and do matters so much more than anyone else.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“All of my base are belong to me.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Harry,” Thomas said, “be real. Everyone wants someone to make us pancakes; we’re all just too grown-up to say it.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Home, like love, hate, war, and peace, is one of those words that is so important that it doesn’t need more than one syllable. Home is part of the fabric of who humans are. Doesn’t matter if you’re a vampire or a wizard or a secretary or a schoolteacher; you have to have a home, even if only in principle—there has to be a zero point from which you can make comparisons to everything else. Home tends to be it. That can be a good thing, to help you stay oriented in a very confusing world. If you don’t know where your feet are planted, you’ve got no way to know where you’re heading when you start taking steps. It can be a bad thing, when you run into something so different from home that it scares you and makes you angry. That’s also part of being human. But there’s a deeper meaning to home. Something simpler, more primal. It’s where you eat the best food because other predators can’t take it from you very easily there. It’s where you and your mate are the most intimate. It’s where you raise your children, safe against a world that can do horrible things to them. It’s where you sleep, safe. It’s where you relax. It’s where you dream. Home is where you embrace the present and plan the future. It’s where the books are. And more than anything else, it’s where you build that world that you want.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“That’s the thing about living behind all that security: If it can keep threats out, it can just as easily keep you in.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“There was a universe of pain residing in that ellipses.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“This loud was a full-body, weapons-grade loud.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“And you both hurt each other terribly, because you’re family. Because what you say and do matters so much more than anyone else.” She leaned down and put her cheek against my forehead. “Listen to me. I know it hurts right now. But the reason it hurts so much is because you care about each other so much. And that pain will eventually fade. But you’ll both still care.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“You have to realize when you’ve reached the limits of what you can choose to do to change the situation.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“He glowered at me. Then he said, “When the hell did you get deep?” “Through experience, wisdom I have earned,” I said in Yoda’s voice.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“the end of the day, people have to be who they are. If you try to take that from them, you diminish them. You reduce them to children, unable to make decisions for themselves. There’s no way to poison your relationship with someone else faster.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Home, like love, hate, war, and peace, is one of those words that is so important that it doesn’t need more than one syllable.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Make things right?” I asked. “Where did you learn that one?” “From Mr. Carpenter,” she said. “He says making things right is the first and last thing you should do every day. And that it’s what you always try to do.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Her P90, a personal defense weapon that was the bastard child of an assault rifle and a box of Belgian chocolates, was resting on the safety railing, its barrel aimed in the same general direction as where I had been standing and negotiating moments before.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“The pain we feel in life always grows. When we’re little, little pains hurt us. When we get bigger, we learn to handle more and more pain and carry on regardless. Old people are the hands-down champions of enduring pain.”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks
“Only the young think being called old is an insult,”
Jim Butcher, Peace Talks

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