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“The tunnel of winter had settled over our lives, ushered in by that great official Hoodwink, the end of daylight saving time. Personally I would vote for one more hour of light on winter evenings instead of the sudden, extra-early blackout. Whose idea was it to jilt us this way, leaving us in cold November with our unsaved remnants of daylight petering out before the workday ends? In my childhood, as early as that, I remember observing the same despair every autumn: the feeling that sunshine, summertime, and probably life itself had passed me by before I'd even finished a halfway decent tree fort. But mine is not to question those who command the springing forward and the falling back. I only vow each winter to try harder to live like a potato, with its tacit understanding that time is time, no matter what any clock might say. I get through the hibernation months by hovering as close as possible to the woodstove without actual self-immolation, and catching up on my reading, cheered at regular intervals by the excess of holidays that collect in a festive logjam at the outflow end of our calendar.”
Barbara Kingsolver“Anyone and anything can survive the daylight. It's night that's the hardest to live.”
Darnell Lamont Walker“Be healthy by being outdoors in the natural daylight with nature!”
Steven Magee, Light Forensics“Daylight tricks you into thinking what you see is truth, lets you go through life thinking you know everything. But the truth is we are sleepwalkers. We walk through the night that is chaos and dark and forever keeps its truth to itself.”
Paul Lynch, Grace“In daylight and up close, he was merciless, all smiles and freckles, the brightest, boldest flame a moth could wish for.”
Alexis Hall, Waiting for the Flood“No matter how deep the night is, there will always be a daylight. MAWUKO”
WISDOM KWASHIE MENSAH (WKM)“The searing light of morningAsks unwelcome questions,Fragile hopes soon blistered by daylight.”
Scott Hastie“There was no sudden, striking, and emotional transition. Like the warming of a room or the coming of daylight. When you first notice them they have already been going on for some time.”
C.S. Lewis, A Grief Observed