28 Quotes from I'm Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy - BookQuotesBlog.com (2023)

Hello. I am Deepak Kundu, an avid book reader and quotes collector. Here is a list of 28 quotes that I liked and saved while reading I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy. I hope you enjoy reading them.

I’m Glad My Mom Died Quotes

I absolutely prefer writing to acting. Through writing, I feel power for maybe the first time in my life. I don’t have to say somebody else’s words. I can write my own. I can be myself for once. I like the privacy of it. Nobody’s watching. Nobody’s judging. Nobody’s weighing in. No casting directors or agents or managers or directors or Mom. Just me and the page. Writing is the opposite of performing to me. Performing feels inherently fake. Writing feels inherently real.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

#jennette-mccurdy-quotes

Many aspects of any job are out of the control of the person doing it, but in acting that’s especially the case. As an actor, you can’t control which agents want to represent you, what roles your agent submits you for, which auditions you get, what callbacks you get, what roles you get, what the lines are for your role, how you look for your role, how the director directs your performance, how the editor edits your performance, whether the show gets picked up or the movie does well, whether critics like your performance, whether you get famous, how the media portrays you, and so on. God bless the souls who can tolerate that much up-in-the-airness in their lives, but I can’t anymore.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

#jennette-mccurdy-quotes

There’s a lot of talk about big breaks in Hollywood, but so far I haven’t experienced that. Instead, I’ve experienced a bunch of little breaks that trickle in just as I’m almost positive I won’t catch one again. Mom says Hollywood’s like a bad boyfriend. “They keep stringing you along without making any type of formal commitment.” I’m not exactly sure what this means, but it sounds right.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

#hollywood-quotes

Crying on cue is the skill you want in child acting. Everything else pales in comparison. If you can bring the tears on command, you’re a real player. A real contender.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

Fun isn’t a thing I’m particularly familiar with. Life’s a serious thing. There’s a lot going on in this place. Being prepared and working hard and doing well are far more important than fun.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

#jennette-mccurdy-quotes

It confuses me when people throw a spin on the delivery of something to overcompensate for the fact that the thing they’re delivering is unpleasant.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

#jennette-mccurdy-quotes

The kind of fame I have now is causing me a level of stress that I did not know was possible. I know everybody wants it, and everybody tells me how lucky I am to have it, but I hate it.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

#jennette-mccurdy-quotes

I want to do good work. I want to do work I’m proud of. This matters to me on a deep, inherent level. I want to make a difference, or at least feel like I’m making a difference through my work. Without that feeling, that connection, the work feels pointless and vapid. I feel pointless and vapid.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

#jennette-mccurdy-quotes

I’ve pretended to be other people my whole life, my whole childhood and adolescence and young adulthood. The years that you’re supposed to spend finding yourself, I was spending pretending to be other people. The years that you’re supposed to spend building character, I was spending building characters. I’m more convinced than ever that I need to quit acting. That it doesn’t serve my mental or emotional health.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

#jennette-mccurdy-quotes

At the beginning of the decade, the people I was close to seemed like friends for life, people I could never imagine not seeing every day. But life happens. Love happens. Loss happens. Change and growth happen at different paces for different people, and sometimes the paces just don’t line up. It’s devastating if I think too much about it, so I usually don’t.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

#jennette-mccurdy-quotes

Why do we romanticize the dead? Why can’t we be honest about them? Especially moms. They’re the most romanticized of anyone.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

#jennette-mccurdy-quotes

Mom’s watching me and I’m watching her and that’s how it always is. We’re always connected. Intertwined. One.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

No one else in the family seems to understand Mom’s emotions. Everyone else walks around clueless, never knowing which Mom they’re going to get. But I always know. I’ve spent my whole life studying her so that I can always know, because I always want to do whatever I can in any given moment to keep or make Mom happy.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

Fame has put a wedge between Mom and me that I didn’t think was possible. She wanted this. And I wanted her to have it. I wanted her to be happy. But now that I have it, I realize that she’s happy and I’m not. Her happiness came at the cost of mine. I feel robbed and exploited.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

Maybe people go to church because they want things from God. And they keep going while they’re wishing and yearning and longing for those things. But then maybe once they get those things, they realize they don’t need church anymore. Who needs God when you’ve got clear mammograms and a series regular role on Nickelodeon?

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

Mom only approves of me hanging out with two types of boys—Mormons and gays. And even then she wants to supervise the hangout.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

I feel the wedge between Mom and I growing by the day. With every lie I tell, I feel myself slipping further away from her. With every pound I gain, every binge I partake in, I feel myself getting more disconnected from her. I’m so confused and troubled by this wedge. I’m desperate to feel close with her, but also desperate for that closeness to be on my terms, not hers. I want her to know me for who I’m becoming. I want her to allow my growth. I want her to want me to be me. But that feels more like a fantasy than a possibility, for now at least. So for now, I lie.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

I don’t like knowing people in the context of things. Oh, that’s the person I work out with. That’s the person I’m in a book club with. That’s the person I did that show with. Because once the context ends, so does the friendship. I yearn to know the people I love deeply and intimately—without context, without boxes—and I yearn for them to know me that way, too.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

I’m discovering just how powerful of a tool it is to not love someone. Loving someone is vulnerable. It’s sensitive. It’s tender. And I get lost in them. If I love someone, I start to disappear. It’s so much easier to just do googly eyes and fond memories and inside jokes for a few months, run the second things start to get real, then repeat the cycle with someone new.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

I’m done being a good sport. I resent being a good sport. If I wasn’t such a good sport to begin with, I wouldn’t be in this predicament in the first place. I wouldn’t be on this shitty show saying these shitty lines on this shitty set with this shitty hairstyle. Maybe my life would be entirely different right now.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

People seem to assign thin with “good,” heavy with “bad,” and too thin also with “bad.” There’s such a small window of “good.” It’s a window that I currently fall into, even though my habits are so far from good. I’m abusing my body every day. I’m miserable. I’m depleted. And yet the compliments keep pouring in.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

Anyone with an eating disorder can tell when anyone else has an eating disorder. It’s like a secret code you can’t help but pick up on.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

Through the years, I’ve slowly learned that the entertainment business is one where what’s being said is rarely what’s being talked about. This way of operating not only disagrees with me but seems genuinely impossible for me to adapt to.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

Millions of people dream of being famous, and here I am with fame and hating it. I somehow feel entitled to my hatred since I was not the one who dreamed of being famous. Mom was. Mom pushed this on me. I’m allowed to hate someone else’s dream, even if it’s my reality.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

Without Mom around, I don’t know what I want. I don’t know what I need. I don’t know who I am. And I certainly don’t know what to wish for.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

My life is miserable right now. Sex is a reprieve. It’s where I lose myself. I do not want to give up this shred of silver lining in my life.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

I am 95 pounds. Or 105 pounds. Or 115 pounds. Or 125 pounds. Whatever the scale reads, I am that and only that. That is who I am. Or rather, who I was. I no longer want that number to be the entirety of who I am. To define me. I am ready to experience life beyond the scale.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

My relationship with acting is a complicated one. Not dissimilar to my relationship with food and my body. Both of them feel like constant pulling, yearning, begging, fighting. I’m trying desperately to get their approval, their affection, and I never quite seem to. I’m never quite good enough.

from I’m Glad My Mom Died book by Jennette McCurdy

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