Ben Okri quotes:

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  • The most authentic thing about us is our capacity to create, to overcome, to endure, to transform, to love and to be greater than our suffering.

  • Stories can conquer fear, you know. They can make the heart bigger.

  • One of the greatest gifts my father gave me - unintentionally - was witnessing the courage with which he bore adversity. We had a bit of a rollercoaster life with some really challenging financial periods. He was always unshaken, completely tranquil, the same ebullient, laughing, jovial man.

  • I was born left-handed, but I was made to use my other hand. When I was writing 'Famished Road,' which was very long, I got repetitive stress syndrome. My right wrist collapsed, so I started using my left hand. The prose I wrote with my left hand came out denser, so later on I had to change it.

  • At the heart of 'The Famished Road' is a philosophical conundrum - for me, an essential one: what is reality? Everybody's reality is subjective; it's conditioned by upbringing, ideas, temperament, religion, what's happened to you.

  • If we could be pure dancers in spirit we would never be afraid to love, and we would love with strength and wisdom.

  • We have fallen into this very mean description of humanity. Naturalism in fiction is too reductive in its definition of human beings.

  • I lived rough, by my wits, was homeless, lived on the streets, lived on friends' floors, was happy, was miserable.

  • I study people all the time. For some reason, we're not very good at seeing what's there or hearing what we're hearing.

  • I began my writing life as a poet, so poetry has always been fundamental. I evolved from poetry to journalism to stories to novels. But poetry was always there.

  • If you are working in an office, where do you find the time to write a novel? But you can finish a short story in five pages. Furthermore, a short story is a perfect place to learn the craft.

  • I went to London because, for me, it was the home of literature. I went there because of Dickens and Shakespeare.

  • The strange thing about Africa is how past, present and future come together in a kind of rough jazz, if you like.

  • To sustain your belief through situations that completely undermine it is quite something.

  • The greatest religions convert the world through stories.

  • I am not fighting for success, just to get more beauty out of myself and share it with more people.

  • Magic becomes art when it has nothing to hide.

  • We never think that our mothers will die. It was like suddenly an abyss opened at my feet - I was standing on nothing. It was the strangest thing. Her passing away ripped the solidity out of the world.

  • The earliest storytellers were magi, seers, bards, griots, shamans. They were, it would seem, old as time, and as terrifying to gaze upon as the mysteries with which they wrestled .. (they) helped the community live though one more darkness, with eyes wide open, and with hearts set alight.

  • The magician and the politician have much in common: they both have to draw our attention away from what they are really doing.

  • Reading is an act of civilization; it's one of the greatest acts of civilization because it takes the free raw material of the mind and builds castles of possibilities.

  • Reading, like writing, is a creative act. If readers only bring a narrow range of themselves to the book, then they'll only see their narrow range reflected in it.

  • I know that human beings are capable of anything.

  • A man must be able to hold his drink because drunkenness is sometimes necessary in this difficult life.

  • Don't despair too much if you see beautiful things destroyed, if you see them perish. Because the best things are always growing in secret.

  • The acknowledged legislators of the world take the world as given. They dislike mysteries, for mysteries cannot be coded, or legislated, and wonder cannot be made into law. And so these legislators police the accepted frontiers of things.

  • Home can be the friend you have been searching for all your life or the person you met once very briefly.

  • Fire is one of my temperaments. It is behind all my work... Fire is a chemical presence.

  • I'm conscious of a series of circles working its way through my life. And at this particular moment I have come round to the beginning of my writing cycle. It begins with poetry. There's hardly a day that goes past on which I don't write poetry.

  • One human life is deeper than the ocean. Strange fishes and sea-monsters and mighty plants live in the rock-bed of our spirits. The whole of human history is an undiscovered continent deep in our souls. There are dolphins, plants that dream, magic birds inside us. The sky is inside us. The earth is in us.

  • Literature doesn't have a country. Shakespeare is an African writer. His Falstaff, for example, is very African in his appetite for life, his largeness of spirit. The characters of Turgenev are ghetto dwellers. Dickens characters are Nigerians.

  • We disliked the rigours of existence, the unfulfilled longings, the enshrined injustices of the world, the labyrinths of love, the ignorance of parents, the fact of dying, and the amazing indifference of the Living in the midst of the simple beauties of the universe. We feared the heartlessness of human beings, all of whom are born blind, few of whom ever learn to see.

  • The fact of storytelling hints at a fundamental human unease, hints at human imperfection. Where there is perfection there is no story to tell.

  • The higher the artist, the fewer the gestures. The fewer the tools, the greater the imagination. The greater the will, the greater the secret failure.

  • You are a mischievous one. You will cause no end of trouble. You have to travel many roads before you find the river of your destiny. This life of yours will be full of riddles. You will be protected and you will never be alone.

  • I was told stories, we were all told stories as kids in Nigeria. We had to tell stories that would keep one another interested, and you weren't allowed to tell stories that everybody else knew. You had to dream up new ones.

  • I learned that life will go through changes - up and down and up again. It's what life does.

  • It is not important for me as a writer that you leave a piece of writing of mine with either an agreement or even a resonance with what I have said. What is important is that you leave with the resonance of what you have felt and what you thought in reaction to that.

  • To poison a nation, poison its stories. A demoralised nation tells demoralised stories to itself. Beware of the storytellers who are not fully conscious of the importance of their gifts, and who are irresponsible in the application of their art: they

  • Ghetto-dwellers are the great fantasists. There was an extraordinary vibrancy there, an imaginative life. When you are that poor, all you've got left is your belief in the imagination.

  • Our time here is magic! It's the only space you have to realize whatever it is that is beautiful, whatever is true, whatever is great, whatever is potential, whatever is rare, whatever is unique, in. It's the only space.

  • I held you in the square And felt the evening Re-order itself around Your smile.

  • The best writing is not about the writer, the best writing is absolutely not about the writer, it's about us, it's about the reader.

  • When you can imagine you begin to create and when you begin to create you realize that you can create a world that you prefer to live in, rather than a world that you're suffering in.

  • The worst time was 1983. Love and life and everything went wrong. I reached absolute rock bottom. I saw the Minotaur at the bottom of the abyss. I learnt of the harshness of the world and its impartiality to human failure.

  • 'The Rime of the Ancient Mariner' had a formative effect on me. I think it's one of those works that if you encounter it very early you're doubly enchanted by the beauty of the language and the strangeness of the vision. It stays with you.

  • You see, I was told stories, we were all told stories as kids in Nigeria. We had to tell stories that would keep one another interested, and you weren't allowed to tell stories that everybody else knew. You had to dream up new ones.

  • Some of my reactions are very Nigerian. I still believe that words are things.

  • You cannot come to a Nigerian restaurant without having pepper soup.

  • I believe in leavening. You can't have words sticking out too much, like promontories. They disturb the density. You have to flatten them, or raise the surrounding terrain.

  • One of the greatest gifts my father gave me - unintentionally - was witnessing the courage with which he bore adversity.

  • When I write a poem, I go into a state of self-forgetfulness, and something higher takes over; I like to call it my best self.

  • The Rime of the Ancient Mariner' had a formative effect on me. I think it's one of those works that if you encounter it very early you're doubly enchanted by the beauty of the language and the strangeness of the vision. It stays with you.

  • Artists and writers have to deal with the element that makes the real real and the dream real while you are dreaming it. That's where stories and poems get their power.

  • Only those who truly love and who are truly strong can sustain their lives as a dream. You dwell in your own enchantment. Life throws stones at you, but your love and your dream change those stones into the flowers of discovery. Even if you lose, or are defeated by things, your triumph will always be exemplary. And if no one knows it, then there are places that do. People like you enrich the dreams of the worlds, and it is dreams that create history. People like you are unknowing transformers of things, protected by your own fairy-tale, by love.

  • We have not yet arrived, but every point at which we stop requires a re-definition of our destination.

  • Beware of the stories you read or tell; subtly, at night, beneath the waters of consciousness, they are altering your world.

  • Stories are the secret reservoir of values: change the stories individuals and nations live by and tell themselves, and you change the individuals and nations.

  • What you see is what you make. What you see in a people is what you eventually create in them.

  • The road will never swallow you. The river of destiny will always overcome evil. May you understand your fate. Suffering will never destroy you, but will make you stronger. Success will never confuse you of scatter your spirit, but will make you fly higher into the good sunlight. Your life will always surprise you.

  • We plan our lives according to a dream that came to us in our childhood, and we find that life alters our plans. And yet, at the end, from a rare height, we also see that our dream was our fate. It's just that providence had other ideas as to how we would get there. Destiny plans a different route, or turns the dream around, as if it were a riddle, and fulfills the dream in ways we couldn't have expected.

  • There ought to be three traditions in the art of humanity: the realistic, the visionary and the wild.

  • Yes, the highest things are beyond words. That is probably why all art aspires to the condition of wordlessness. When literature works on you, it does so in silence, in your dreams, in your wordless moments. Good words enter you and become moods, become the quiet fabric of your being. Like music, like painting, literature too wants to transcend its primary condition and become something higher. Art wants to move into silence, into the emotional and spiritual conditions of the world. Statues become melodies, melodies become yearnings, yearnings become actions.

  • It is easy to forget how mysterious and mighty stories are. They do their work in silence, invisibly. They work with all the internal materials of your mind and self. They become part of you while changing you. Beware the stories you read or tell; subtly, at night, beneath the waters of consciousness, they are altering your world.

  • In the beginning there was a river. The river became a road and the road branched out to the whole world. And because the road was once a river it was always hungry.

  • Maybe there are only three kinds of stories: those we live, those we tell, and those that help our souls fly upwards to a greater life.

  • I'm fascinated by the mysterious element that runs through our lives. Everyone is looking out of the world through their emotion and history. Nobody has an absolute reality.

  • What hope is there for individual reality or authenticity when the forces of violence and orthodoxy, the earthly powers of guns and bombs and manipulated public opinion make it impossible for us to be authentic and fulfilled human beings? The only hope is in the creation of alternative values, alternative realities. The only hope is in daring to redream one's place in the world - a beautiful act of imagination, and a sustained act of self becoming. Which is to say that in some way or another we breach and confound the accepted frontiers of things.

  • The worst realities of our age are manufactured realities. It is therefore our task, as creative participants in the universe, to re dream our world. The fact of possessing imagination means that everything can be re dreamed. Each reality can have it

  • Destiny plans a different route and fulfills the dream in ways we couldn't have expected.

  • This is what you must be like. Grow wherever life puts you down.

  • A man's greatest battles are the ones he fights within himself.

  • This earth that we live on is full of stories in the same way that, for a fish, the ocean is full of ocean. Some people say when we are born we're born into stories. I say we're also born from stories.

  • It may be that what you could be haunts you. It is real. It is a weight you have to carry around. Each failure to become, to be, is a weight. Each state you could inhabit is a burden as heavy as any physical weight, but more so, because it weighs on your soul. It is the ghost of your possibilities hanging around your neck, an invisible albatros, potentials unknowingly murdered.

  • The law is simple. Every experience is repeated or suffered till you experience it properly and fully the first time.

  • Without stories we would go mad. Life would lose its moorings or lose its orientations. even in silence we are living our stories

  • There is a kind of expressed love which is easy to subvert. When a figure is loved for their deeds, their conquests, their heroism, their goodness, their love of the people, these are easy enough to destroy... But there is a kind of love which is felt for apparently no reason... A love, inspired, it seems, by the gods, which it is impossible to fight, distort, destroy, or weaken. In fact, the attempts to destroy such loves only strengthen them. And to do nothing allows them to continue to grow at their natural pace, inexoribly, till this love becomes a wide and silent adoration.

  • Creativity is the art of the impossible

  • We can redream this world and make the dream come real. Human beings are gods hidden from themselves.

  • a dream can be the highest point of a life

  • Wholeness is the enemy of the artist. We ought to be broken, ruined in some way.

  • If we are true, if we can love, if we have vision, if we can have courage, we can, we should, we ought to, we will...

  • Painters ought to be mute. Speech is the enemy of expression.

  • Don't read what everyone else is reading. Check them out later, cautiously.

  • Don't neglect the gold in your own back yard.

  • An inner darkness is darker than an outer darkness.

  • To anyone who is homeless, I say, find a home.

  • We are living in enchanted time. With our spirits right.

  • If you are working in an office, where do you find the time to write a novel? But you can finish a short story in five pages. Furthermore, a short story is a perfect place to learn the craft

  • When you stop inventing reality then you see things as they really are.

  • When chaos is the god of an era, clamorous music is the deity's chief instrument.

  • I was going to be a scientist.

  • To see the madness and yet walk a perfect silver line. ... That's what the true story-teller should be: a great guide, a clear mind, who can walk a silver line in hell or madness.

  • We can still astonish the gods in humanity And be the stuff of future legends, If we but dare to be real, And have the courage to see That this is the time to dream The best dream of them all.

  • Who knows, maybe this whole planet is an asylum, a penal realm. A place for hard cases.

  • People are as healthy and confident as the stories they tell themselves.

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