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It's being a grown up, which I never figured out how to do, scrubbing the tub, and remembering to eat and shampoo my hair. It's the basics: I can write a whole book, but I cannot handle the basics.
Elizabeth Wurtzel
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Interpretation

What this quote means

The quote reflects the challenges of adult responsibilities and the difficulty of managing everyday tasks despite having larger creative ambitions.

Elizabeth Wurtzel's quote highlights the irony of adulthood, where one can accomplish significant and complex tasks yet struggle with fundamental daily responsibilities like cleaning or self-care. It emphasizes the disconnect between intellectual or creative pursuits and the mundane, often overwhelming nature of life’s basic chores, suggesting that mastering the essentials of daily living is a challenge many face.

Themes

AdulthoodResponsibilityStruggleSelf-CareChallenges

In practice

Example use cases

This quote could be used in a discussion about the challenges of adulting in a seminar on personal development.

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Whenever I talk to anyone I care about, I am always seeking approval. There is always a pleading lilt in my voice that demands love. Even the people I work with, the ones I am supposed to have a professional relationship with, all business, get pulled into my need. I can't help it. I want to be adored.
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Getting help for substance abuse can be reduced to the deceptively simple focus of ‘keeping away from the dope.’ But what does getting help with depression mean? Learning to keep away from your own mind?
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Taking a hypersensitive approach to life had come to seem so much more pure and honest then joining the ranks of the numb masses who could let it all slide by. What I stopped realizing was that if you feel everything intensely, ultimately you feel nothing at all. Everything registers at the same decibel.
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But day after day of depression, the kind that doesn’t seem to merit carting me off to a hospital but allows me to sit here on this stoop in summer camp as if I were normal, day after day wearing down everybody who gets near me. My behavior seems, somehow, not acute enough for them to know what to do with me, though I’m just enough of a mess to be driving everyone around me crazy.
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Quote by Elizabeth Wurtzel | QuoteProject