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Quotations by Author
Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider
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- Real meaningful endeavours, the biggies in human existence, often require the sacrifice of others.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, Northern Lights, 1993
- Trees like to have kids climb on them, but trees are much bigger than we are, and much more forgiving.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, Old Tree, 1993
- Marriage. It's like a cultural hand-rail. It links folks to the past and guides them to the future.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, Our Wedding, 1992
- What are man and woman if not members of two very different and warring tribes? Yet decade after decade, century after century, they attempt in marriage to reconcile and forge a union. Why? I don't know. Biological imperative? Divine law? Or just a desire to connect to that mysterious other? In any case, it's always struck me as a hopeful thing.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, Our Wedding, 1992
- There can be no spirituality, no sanctity, no truth without the female sex.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, Revelations, 1993
- I always admired atheists. I think it takes a lot of faith.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, Seoul Mates, 1991
- I used to think of all the billions of people in the world, and of all those people, how was I going to meet the right ones? The right ones to be my friends, the right one to be my husband. Now I just believe you meet the people you're supposed to meet.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, The Quest, 1995
- Sometimes the mind, for reasons we don't necessarily understand, just decides to go to the store for a quart of milk.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, Three Doctors, 1993
- Let's not kid ourselves. Whatever we diagnose, most patients, if they don't die, get well by themselves. Our job is mainly to try to make them feel better; do no harm.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, Wake Up Call, 1992
- Listen, can you hear it? Spring's sweet cantata. The strains of grass pushing through the snow. The song of buds swelling on the vine. The tender timpani of a baby robin's heart. Spring.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, Wake Up Call, 1992
- As a scientist, I am not sure anymore that life can be reduced to a class struggle, to dialectical materialism, or any set of formulas. Life is spontaneous and it is unpredictable, it is magical. I think that we have struggled so hard with the tangible that we have forgotten the intangible.
- Diane Frolov and Andrew Schneider, Northern Exposure, Zarya, 1994
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