A Quote by Nick Viall

I truly believe that closure doesn't need to come from the other person. You can always get closure from yourself. — © Nick Viall
I truly believe that closure doesn't need to come from the other person. You can always get closure from yourself.
The reason 'closure' is a cliche is that it is used too often, too imprecisely, and doesn't in any case reflect reality. In reality, such closure in broken friendships and much else in life is rarely achieved; only death brings closure and then not always for those still living.
I'm not interested in closure. Some people just have heart attacks and die, right? There's no closure.
Closure isn't closure until someone's ready to close the door.
We women have lived too much with closure: "If he notices me, if I marry him, if I get into college, if I get this work accepted, if I get this job" -- there always seems to loom the possibility of something being over, settled, sweeping clear the way for contentment. This is the delusion of a passive life. When the hope for closure is abandoned, when there is an end to fantasy, adventure for women will begin.
I will continue to work for the advancement of freedoms in Egypt and the Arab world until I drop dead... Education itself - which can and should play an important role in the apprenticeship of tolerance and respect for other people -sometimes encourages identitarian closure, or even extremist behaviour... It is therefore vital to ensure that education does not encourage rejection of other people or identitarian closure, but that on the contrary it encourages knowledge and respect for other cultures, other religions and other ways of being and living.
I don't believe you ever get closure on anything. Things leave a permanent mark on you.
I'm not interested in leaving it open-ended. That would just cause me frustration. I wouldn't be satisfied. What's really cool about Fringe, and one of the things we did do right, was that the way we chose to tell the story was that, with every season, there was a closure and then a new chapter. That allowed us to actually make the closure.
I don't necessarily believe that stories need closure. I just believe they need a beginning, middle, and end, but the end doesn't have to prevent us from continuing to grapple with the story at hand. It ideally should demand that we remain engaged with the story.
Create a need for closure.
You start projecting hurt and pain onto yourself when you don't find closure. Be honest with the situation and yourself, clean the wound, and move on.
There's a fearful term that's in fashion at the moment - closure. People apparently believe it is desirable and attainable.
I don't really believe in closure. That's something that writers talk about or people wished that they had.
If a movie isn't released, it's one thing, but if you know it will be, it's nice to have closure and see it come out.
I sort of don't believe in closure. In the sense that it doesn't make me feel better to think that something is over.
For me, the goal of a reading is fundamentally to help the person get closure or insight, and so sharing negative information without any positive silver lining or any potential resolution is pointless.
Closure is a neurotic and infantile demand to make upon reality, other people, or language.
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