"I don't think I could live with myself if I stopped trying"
About this Quote
There is a particular kind of stubbornness in "I don't think I could live with myself if I stopped trying": it frames effort less as ambition than as basic self-maintenance. Sossamon isn't selling hustle culture here. She's describing trying as an internal ethic, the minimum price of admission for self-respect. The line is structured like a confession, not a manifesto. "I don't think" softens the claim, giving it the hesitant honesty of someone who knows how grand declarations can curdle into performance. Yet the second half lands like a hard boundary: if I stop, I lose me.
The subtext is that identity, for an artist, is not secured by outcomes. It's secured by motion. "Trying" becomes a stand-in for showing up in the face of indifference, rejection, and the quiet fear that your best work might still not be enough. That's why "live with myself" matters: the real antagonist isn't a critic or an industry gatekeeper; it's self-betrayal. The stakes are intimate, almost domestic. You have to inhabit your own mind.
Coming from a musician with a career spanning scenes and mediums, the quote reads as a survival strategy in creative life, where external validation is sporadic and often mismatched to the labor. It also hints at the moral trap of quitting: not that stopping is sinful, but that for some people it triggers a private shame louder than any public failure. Trying, in that context, is less about winning than about staying whole.
The subtext is that identity, for an artist, is not secured by outcomes. It's secured by motion. "Trying" becomes a stand-in for showing up in the face of indifference, rejection, and the quiet fear that your best work might still not be enough. That's why "live with myself" matters: the real antagonist isn't a critic or an industry gatekeeper; it's self-betrayal. The stakes are intimate, almost domestic. You have to inhabit your own mind.
Coming from a musician with a career spanning scenes and mediums, the quote reads as a survival strategy in creative life, where external validation is sporadic and often mismatched to the labor. It also hints at the moral trap of quitting: not that stopping is sinful, but that for some people it triggers a private shame louder than any public failure. Trying, in that context, is less about winning than about staying whole.
Quote Details
| Topic | Never Give Up |
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