A Quote by Cecil Taylor

To feel is perhaps the most terrifying thing in this society. — © Cecil Taylor
To feel is perhaps the most terrifying thing in this society.
It's a terrifying thing to be perhaps 16 or 17 and feel like you are a failure and a has-been.
Diversity may be the hardest thing for a society to live with, and perhaps the most dangerous thing for a society to be without.
Cancer was the most terrifying, arduous, painful thing, but it was also a profound gift in the sense that I was holding so much in my body for so many years that was dark and terrifying which was preventing my coming back into myself.
Perhaps everything terrifying is deep down a helpless thing that needs our help.
I think characters are most terrifying when they're relatable. It's best when your most horrible characters make sense, and are believable. That's when a movie is most terrifying.
If you look at UFC champions: BJ Penn - terrifying! GSP - terrifying! Anderson Silva - terrifying! But I'm not terrifying.
The male ego is a terrifying, terrifying thing, you know? If it's shattered, it becomes even more dangerous.
You perform the thing that you made, that's inside of you, and to subject that to any kind of scrutiny is terrifying. It's still terrifying to me.
The most terrifying thing for most everybody in the whole Western World is to take responsibility for your own life and to experience real freedom.
Natural disasters are terrifying - that loss of control, this feeling that something is just going to randomly end your life for absolutely no reason is terrifying. But, what scares me is the human reaction to it and how people behave when the rules of civility and society are obliterated.
The most terrifying thing is to accept oneself completely.
I hate heights, that's the most terrifying thing for me.
The most terrifying thing in my life is a blank sheet of paper.
But alas, the most terrifying aspect of the whole fascist episode is the dark fact that most of its poisons are generated not by evil men or evil peoples, but by quite ordinary men in search of an answer to the baffling problems that beset every society.
The most terrifying thing is sometimes not what we see, but rather what we are forced to imagine.
All of us in society are supposed to believe that cruelty to animals is wrong and that it is a good thing to prevent needless suffering. So if that is true, how can meat be acceptable under any but the most extraordinary circumstances, such as perhaps roasting the bird who died flying into a window?
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