A Quote by Zoe Lister-Jones

For any couple, once you delve into the idea of non-monogamy, you're entering pretty frightening territory. — © Zoe Lister-Jones
For any couple, once you delve into the idea of non-monogamy, you're entering pretty frightening territory.
No one has any idea what's next... the uncertainty of the business climate in America is frightening, frightening to everybody, and it's delaying the recovery.
With any other movie, you're entering new territory, so it's quite different to be involved in something where it's the same characters, and the same people.
I won't name any names, but I've done a couple of shows where once the pilot got picked up, the creators openly said, 'I have no idea where we're going.'
Polygamy and polyandry distribute the frightening physical solidarity of monogamy. Monogamous couples are always hungry for company: to dilute sex.
Jean Renoir once suggested that most true creators have only one idea and spend their lives reworking it, but then very rapidly he added that most people don't have any ideas at all, so one idea is pretty amazing.
The frightening and most difficult thing about being what somebody calls a creative person is that you have absolutely no idea where any of your thoughts come from, really. And especially, you don't have any idea about where they're going to come from tomorrow.
Monogamy, monotony. There's only a couple of letters...
Territorial expansion demands warriors and, once population levels are stable, demotes the female role. Once religious empires have not just an idea but a territory to call their own, the soldiers of god are of more value than his handmaidens.
A Country is not a mere territory; the particular territory is only its foundation. The Country is the idea which rises upon that foundation; it is the sentiment of love, the sense of fellowship which binds together all the sons of that territory.
What children, in fact all of us at any age, find frightening is unreliability and emotional coldness. The idea that you can't affect someone, that you can't see where they're coming from and can change tact at any moment.
The idea is quite unfounded that on entering into society we give up any natural rights.
I believe in monogamy if that's what a couple decides upon together, but it all depends on the personal history and culture of the two involved.
Lifelong monogamy is a maniacal idea.
There is a vast territory between what we're trying to leave behind, and where we want to go - and we don't have any maps for that territory.
Living in New York, I get excited by the idea of working in a different medium. And it's pretty frightening because whatever skills it takes to make a good piece of theater seem mysterious to me right now.
I don't know the literary world; I was scared of being confronted with famous names, not knowing what they had written. It was occupied territory I was entering.
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