"I'm not going to doubt my life"
About this Quote
A four-word refusal can land harder than a manifesto. "I'm not going to doubt my life" reads like Yoko Ono shutting the door on a whole genre of interrogation: the kind that asks a woman to justify her presence, her choices, her art, her partners, her contradictions. It’s not a claim of perfection. It’s a boundary line.
Ono’s phrasing matters. Not "I don’t doubt my life" (a statement about inner feelings), but "I’m not going to doubt" (a decision, a stance). Doubt is framed as something you can opt out of, like a script you’ve been handed. That makes the quote quietly defiant: it treats self-suspicion as learned behavior, not destiny. The simplicity is almost confrontational, the way her conceptual work often is - spare, direct, leaving you nowhere to hide.
The cultural context is inseparable. Ono has been turned into a symbol people felt entitled to litigate: avant-garde artist versus celebrity accessory, scapegoat versus muse, interloper versus innovator. Her life has been public property in a way that invites endless second-guessing. This line denies the audience that power. It’s less motivational slogan than survival tactic.
There’s also an artist’s ethic embedded in it. Doubting your life can become a way of sanitizing it, trimming the strange or inconvenient parts to fit someone else’s narrative. Ono’s refusal protects the messiness that fuels real work - the insistence that a life, like an artwork, doesn’t need permission to be valid.
Ono’s phrasing matters. Not "I don’t doubt my life" (a statement about inner feelings), but "I’m not going to doubt" (a decision, a stance). Doubt is framed as something you can opt out of, like a script you’ve been handed. That makes the quote quietly defiant: it treats self-suspicion as learned behavior, not destiny. The simplicity is almost confrontational, the way her conceptual work often is - spare, direct, leaving you nowhere to hide.
The cultural context is inseparable. Ono has been turned into a symbol people felt entitled to litigate: avant-garde artist versus celebrity accessory, scapegoat versus muse, interloper versus innovator. Her life has been public property in a way that invites endless second-guessing. This line denies the audience that power. It’s less motivational slogan than survival tactic.
There’s also an artist’s ethic embedded in it. Doubting your life can become a way of sanitizing it, trimming the strange or inconvenient parts to fit someone else’s narrative. Ono’s refusal protects the messiness that fuels real work - the insistence that a life, like an artwork, doesn’t need permission to be valid.
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Ono, Yoko. (n.d.). I'm not going to doubt my life. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/im-not-going-to-doubt-my-life-3863/
Chicago Style
Ono, Yoko. "I'm not going to doubt my life." FixQuotes. Accessed February 2, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/im-not-going-to-doubt-my-life-3863/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"I'm not going to doubt my life." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/im-not-going-to-doubt-my-life-3863/. Accessed 2 Feb. 2026.
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