Gender is a way to hide from the simple truth we all tell: 'Hey, I'm here, I have a body.'
— Susan Griffin
Each life reverberates in every other life. Whether or not we acknowledge it, we are connected, woven together in our needs and desires, rich and poor, men and women alike.
I am not so different in my history of abandonment from anyone else after all. We have all been split away from the earth, each other, ourselves.
A story is told as much by silence as by speech.
Just as the slave master required the slaves to imitate the image he had of them, so women, who live in a relatively powerless position, politically and economically, feel obliged by a kind of implicit force to live up to culture's image of what is female.
Masculinity is a terrible problem, as we construe it and shape it.
Society, like nature, is one body, really.
What is buried in the past of one generation falls to the next to claim.
Philosophy means nothing unless it is connected to birth, death, and the continuance of life. Anytime you are going to build a society that works, you have to begin from nature and the body.
I think we actually punish children out of their relationship with their bodies... we categorically separate mind and body and emotion and intellect.
I grew up right near Hollywood, and I wanted to be a filmmaker.
Everyone who is born holds dual citizenship, in the kingdom of the well and in the kingdom of the sick.
Before a secret is told, one can often feel the weight of it in the atmosphere.
In one sense I feel that my book is a one-woman argument against determinism.