A Quote by John Green

We all romanticize the people we adore. — © John Green
We all romanticize the people we adore.

Quote Topics

My whole comic persona is that of a guy who explores the id: I romanticize gluttony, I romanticize laziness, and people identify with that.
I am addicted to 'Vogue' magazines, be they French, British - I adore, adore, adore.
One of the mistakes women have made is to romanticize life in the rose-covered cottage and then, discovering their error, proceed to romanticize life in the working world.
I literally have zero friends. So I like people to adore me, but I never had a talent that made people adore me.
I would never butt heads with Rob Zombie. I don't know anybody that's in acting that ever butted heads with Rob Zombie. I adore Rob. I adore him. I adore working with him. I adore knowing him. I'm happy to consider myself a friend and someone who he hires. I just think he's great.
I love life and I love that about people... I adore the human experience, I really adore the ... I love the contradictions of people... I don't mind being sexy and girlish and womanly, and all those things at the same time... smart and very
I hate it when people romanticize Scotland.
Every now and then you run across radiantly attractive people and you're delighted to find they adore you, till you realize that they adore just about everybody - and that's what's made them radiantly attractive.
I adore being with Roberta. I adore being in her spiritual light. I adore being close to her talent and gifts.
People tend to romanticize what they can't quite remember.
I adore clothes, I adore drinking. I just don't have the time or the inclination to totally indulge in it.
It is strange, is it not, how a person can adore one's soul so much that they adore one's body also?
I adore the struggle you carry in yourself. I adore your terrifying sincerity.
I'm a romantic, but I'm not a romantic in the traditional sense. I like to romanticize what happens to me. Whatever happens to me - you could quantify it as good or bad - I romanticize it. I think along the lines of 'When that thing happened, it made me who I am.' That kind of thing. It's a different way of being romantic.
People tend to romanticize this job. So, it's fun to let the air out of it.
Americans, particularly after World War II, tended to romanticize war because in World War II our cause was the cause of humanity, and our soldiers brought home glory and victory, and thank God that they did. But it led us to romanticize it to some extent.
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