“Here's what Mike knew about kids: They did stupid stuff. Pretty much all of them.”
Kaya McLaren“We can fix that. We can fix anything. So the real question remains whether every problem is worth fixing.”
Kaya McLaren“Here's what Mike knew about kids: They did stupid stuff. Pretty much all of them.”
Kaya McLaren, How I Came to Sparkle Again“Why, he wondered, was it so hard to see humankind as capable of creating miracles? Miracles were just second chances if you really thought about it-second chances when all hope was lost.”
Kaya McLaren, How I Came to Sparkle Again“What was it, she wondered, that made some people give up and others fight harder? Where was her fight? She was out.”
Kaya McLaren, How I Came to Sparkle Again“It struck her hard how it was often the ordinary acts that were angelic. Maybe there were angels in the sky and maybe there weren't. Maybe angels helped arrange for Tom to be the one to drive along right at that moment. She didn't know. But what she did know was that there were angels on the ground. She did know that Tom stopped the car, got out, and buried the kid's dead cat. He didn't have to, but he did. It was a small act, but it was huge. And that made Tom an angel to her, one no less divine than any angels that might be in the sky.”
Kaya McLaren, How I Came to Sparkle Again“So the real question remains whether every problem is worth fixing. The answer to that is no.”
Kaya McLaren, How I Came to Sparkle Again“Go spend time with the aspen trees. They'll tell you how it works. They'll tell you to look to your roots for energy. They'll tell you there's warmth below the surface.”
Kaya McLaren, How I Came to Sparkle Again“If you can, judge less and observe more.”
Kaya McLaren, How I Came to Sparkle Again“It made no sense to him, this idea that some people got God and some people didn't.”
Kaya McLaren, How I Came to Sparkle Again“So at the end of the day, here was what Mike was able to believe in: people.It was people and their kindness the made him feel blessed. It was people who were the heroes, and people who were generous, and people who comforted one another.”
Kaya McLaren, How I Came to Sparkle Again