Quote by Rachel McAdams
I think one thing that kids who grow up on farms really have going

I think one thing that kids who grow up on farms really have going for them is they have exposure to death and birth in a totally different way. I think it takes away a little bit of the mystery and a little bit of the fear, and I do wish I had that. And I wish I was able to grow my own food. – Rachel McAdams

Other quotes by Rachel McAdams

You know I never used to be a bad flyer, but I did start to have a fear of flying after I shot a movie where I was terrorized on a plane. I made Wes Cravens Red Eye. I dont think theyre linked but it does make me pause and wonder if they are, so perhaps I will explore that in therapy some day. – Rachel McAdams

Category:
Fear
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Im a hopeless romantic and I believe that you can find love in many different places and be very conflicted. Ive discovered as Ive grown up that life is far more complicated than you think it is when youre a kid. It isnt just a straightforward fairytale. – Rachel McAdams

Category:
Romantic
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Other Quotes from
Death
category

Nothing is a matter of life and death except life and death. – Angela Carter

Category:
Death

Death borders upon our birth, and our cradle stands in the grave. – Joseph Hall

Category:
Death

Deaths an old joke, but each individual encounters it anew. – Ivan Turgenev

Category:
Death

And yet, I suppose you mourn the loss or the death of what you thought your life was, even if you find your life is better after. You mourn the future that you thought youd planned. – Lynn Redgrave

Category:
Death

Random Quotes

Im a romantic a sentimental person thinks things will last, a romantic person hopes against hope that they wont. – F. Scott Fitzgerald

Category:
Hope

Meditation is the discovery that the point of life is always arrived at in the immediate moment. – Alan Watts

Category:
Meditation

My eleven-year-old daughter mopes around the house all day waiting for her breasts to grow. – Bill Cosby

Category:
Women

The silkworm spins out his life, and, wrapping himself in his labor, dies. – Phineas Parkhurst Quimby (1802-1866), “Religion in Disease,” 1865

Category:
Philosophical