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25 Amyr Klink quotes that navigate the writer’s genius

It’s funny how well-being doesn’t depend on comfort, tranquility or favorable situations, but simply and solely on the feeling of going forward.

Nothing is more certain than the arrival of good weather after a storm that seems interminable.

One day you have to stop dreaming and somehow leave.

Life has these things: some days you get everything, other days you get nothing. It’s like the tide: it goes out, but it always comes back.

Whoever has a friend, even if only one, no matter where he is, will never suffer from loneliness; he may miss you, but he won’t be alone.

First of all, you have to want it.

Worse than not finishing a trip is never leaving.

A man needs to travel to places he doesn’t know to break this arrogance that makes us see the world as we imagine it, and not simply as it is or can be.

I discovered how good it is to arrive when you have patience.

To get anywhere, I learned that it is not necessary to dominate the force, but the reason.

Every success has a lot of failure.

You have to stop dreaming, take the plans out of the drawers and somehow start…

The world on TV is beautiful, but it serves little purpose.

Just as in good times the positive side of people adds up, in dark times the negative side multiplies.

Loneliness was the only thing I didn’t feel after I left. Never. Never.

The sea is not an obstacle: it is a path.

I always dreamed of doing what I do today, but I never thought it would work. I learned this while navigating: those who dream cannot sleep. It has to.

It is necessary to question what has been learned.

I don’t expect help from God. God doesn’t exist to get us out of trouble. It is to share pleasures and joys.

I discovered that the greatest happiness there is is the silent certainty that life is worth living.

He was profoundly well, as if life had always been like this, alternating, day after day, violent landscapes with scenes of calm, minutes of worry with moments of great joy.

Without a doubt, this was the biggest risk I took: not leaving.

And then I could see how few things were enough to live in peace and well.

Opportunities are unique.

But nostalgia is sometimes good for the heart.

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