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Quotes

Lane Moore

The most-loved lines from Lane Moore, drawn from 1 book in the library.

“Being alone is not proof that you are unwanted; it is the room where you can stop auditioning for care.”

The book reframes loneliness as a human signal rather than a personal failure. Moore's world is tender because it admits the ache before asking you to grow from it.

— How to Be Alone
“Chosen family begins when you stop accepting almost-love just because the alternative is quiet.”

A major thread is discernment: not every text, date, group, or family tie deserves access to the most vulnerable parts of you.

— How to Be Alone
“Solitude becomes kinder when it has furniture: food, music, clean sheets, a walk, a page, a lamp left on for yourself.”

Moore makes aloneness practical. The private life needs rituals, not slogans, because rituals give the nervous system evidence of care.

— How to Be Alone
“The goal is not to need no one. The goal is to need people without abandoning yourself to be kept.”

This is the book's emotional center: independence is not numbness. Healthy connection still matters, but it cannot require self-erasure.

— How to Be Alone
“Some silences are warnings, and some are invitations. The skill is learning which one you are standing inside.”

How to Be Alone distinguishes isolation from solitude. One diminishes you; the other gives you enough space to hear what is true.

— How to Be Alone
“Your own company should not be treated like the waiting room for a better life.”

The book asks for a more dignified private life: not a holding pattern until romance, family, or popularity arrives, but a life already worth inhabiting.

— How to Be Alone