A Quote by Neko Case

I have a pathological fear of getting my picture taken. — © Neko Case
I have a pathological fear of getting my picture taken.
We are turning into a nation of whimpering slaves to Fear—fear of war, fear of poverty, fear of random terrorism, fear of getting down-sized or fired because of the plunging economy, fear of getting evicted for bad debts or suddenly getting locked up in a military detention camp on vague charges of being a Terrorist sympathizer.
I like having my picture taken and being a glamorous person. Sometimes when I find myself getting impatient, I just remember the times I cried my eyes out because nobody wanted to take my picture at the Trocadero.
I'm pretty used to people not liking having their picture taken. I mean, if you do like to have your picture taken, I worry about you.
'Ugly Betty' has been four years of my life, important adolescent years. I think that all I've really known was getting pampered and interviewed and getting my picture taken.
I'd be bored just going to parties and getting my picture taken.
It's embarrassing standing in front of the camera and getting your picture taken.
Sometimes, when I get a good picture, it feels like I have taken another nervous step into increasingly rarified air. Each good-news picture, no matter how hard-earned, allows me only a crumbling foothold on this steepening climb—an ascent whose milestones are fear and doubt.
I was the one who was always scowling, downcast. I tried to make sure I looked like that when I was getting my picture taken.
I have a pathological fear of confrontation. I'm working on that.
I have this almost pathological fear of boring the reader.
Nothing is more pathological in our pathological modernity than this disease of Christian pity.
Nine years old, I became the victim of war. I didn't like that picture at all. I felt like, why he took my picture, when I was agony, naked, so ugly? I wished that picture wasn't taken.
Excessive interest in pathological behavior was itself pathological
I'm always in those tabloids where they show who's badly dressed. It's funny, because each time I'm getting my picture taken, I'm thinking, This is a nice outfit.
I like making things. I don't like getting my picture taken.
A pathological business, writing, don't you think? Just look what a writer actually does: all that unnatural tense squatting and hunching, all those rituals: pathological!
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