To talk of food is to talk of mothers, at least for me. Lisa Brennan-Jobs More Quotes by Lisa Brennan-Jobs More Quotes From Lisa Brennan-Jobs Three months before he died, I began to steal things from my father's house. I wandered around barefoot and slipped objects into my pockets. I took blush, toothpaste, two chipped finger bowls in celadon blue, a bottle of nail polish, a pair of worn patent-leather ballet slippers, and four faded white pillowcases the color of old teeth. Lisa Brennan-Jobs color white blue father I believe people have the right to tell their own story as honestly and accurately as they can. Lisa Brennan-Jobs own story believe people I think you save things from your past that you don't quite understand, and you put them in a box, and you save them for later until you can unwrap them and try to understand what they meant. Lisa Brennan-Jobs understand think you past When I was in elementary school, I watched 'Cinema Paradiso' 22 times and memorized the dialogue. In the movie, everyone had a place, even the bum who thought he owned the piazza. Eccentricities were celebrated, and no one was isolated. Lisa Brennan-Jobs place thought cinema school Italy was where the soul went to find calm and love, and I wanted to hold the best of it in the palm of my hand. Lisa Brennan-Jobs best calm soul love In California, my mother had raised me mostly alone. We didn't have many things, but she is warm, and we were happy. We moved a lot. We rented. Lisa Brennan-Jobs alone me mother happy My father was rich and renowned, and later - as I got to know him, went on vacations with him, and then lived with him for a few years - I saw another, more glamorous world. Lisa Brennan-Jobs know rich father world I know that organic farms can be industrial and just as large and impersonal as conventional farms. Sometimes the free-range chickens aren't even allowed outside, and so they cluck-walk packed tight in a dim lit barn. But organic farms use fewer chemicals. Lisa Brennan-Jobs outside just know sometimes When I was growing up in California, being vegetarians differentiated my mother and me from normal, held us away from the masses. Lisa Brennan-Jobs being me growing-up mother Prosciutto should be thin and let light through like stained glass. Even I know that. Lisa Brennan-Jobs glass like know light At Harvard, I majored in English Literature. Lisa Brennan-Jobs english harvard literature In literature there was always an epiphany - a tingling moment, sometimes buried - the pearl around which the whole work formed. Lisa Brennan-Jobs moment literature work sometimes The social scene at the Harvard I knew was outside the rules of literature. It was less poignant. Lisa Brennan-Jobs outside rules harvard literature I tried to find a social niche at Harvard - a group, my group - but I was unsuccessful. Lisa Brennan-Jobs tried find group social My mother is an artist, my father an entrepreneur. Lisa Brennan-Jobs entrepreneur artist mother father I don't like catching myself in the mirror because it's like, 'Oh, self.' Lisa Brennan-Jobs mirror myself like self Sometimes it's nice of someone to tell you what you smell like. Lisa Brennan-Jobs someone you nice sometimes I see my husband and the way he is with his daughters, responsive and alive and sensitive in ways my father would have liked to be. My father would have loved to be a man like that, and he surrounded himself with men like that, but he couldn't be. Lisa Brennan-Jobs man husband men father You can have a value system and be unable to totally live it. Lisa Brennan-Jobs system value live you In the spring of 1978, when my parents were 23, my mother gave birth to me on their friend Robert's farm in Oregon with the help of two midwives. The labor and delivery took three hours, start to finish. Lisa Brennan-Jobs friend parents me mother