There’s no comfort in the truth, pain is all you’ll find.
Meaning of the quote
This quote by British musician George Michael means that the truth, even if it's difficult, is better than being comfortable with a lie. Even though the truth may hurt, it's important to face it head-on, because trying to avoid the pain will only lead to more suffering in the long run.
About George Michael
George Michael was an English singer-songwriter and pop culture icon who was one of the best-selling musicians of all time. He formed the pop duo Wham! and later had a successful solo career, earning numerous awards and accolades for his songwriting, vocal performance, and visual presentation. He was known for his charitable work and advocacy for LGBTQ+ rights.
More quotes from George Michael
With pop stars or film stars, we become the object of people’s self-definition, as well as the object of sexual definition.
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I want to make a pop album – something more upbeat than my stuff was in the ’90s.
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I’ve never done anything so political before. I’ve spent years shouting my mouth off about serious issues over dinner tables but never really had the confidence to express my views in a song.
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You’ll never find peace of mind until you listen to your heart.
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Your political system is actually too democratic. The fact that Americans vote on every bill and proposition can prolong bigotry indefinitely, especially where it is aimed at minority groups.
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Everything was going my way. I was happily marching into the history books. Then it all just fell apart.
British singer (1963-2016)
I define my sexuality in terms of the people that I love.
British singer (1963-2016)
There’s no comfort in the truth, pain is all you’ll find.
British singer (1963-2016)
Of course, I want to sell this record – there’s no point making it otherwise.
British singer (1963-2016)
I spent years growing up being told what my sexuality was.
British singer (1963-2016)
I left school at 17 and was a star by the time I was 18 – in certain parts of the world anyway.
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Celebrity and secrets don’t go together. The bastards will get you in the end.
British singer (1963-2016)
I think the media is a real demon.
British singer (1963-2016)
I would advise any gay person that being out in the real sense can never happen too soon.
British singer (1963-2016)
The whole business is built on ego, vanity, self-satisfaction, and it’s total crap to pretend it’s not.
British singer (1963-2016)
I’m not anti-American. I’ve lived with Kenny, a Texan, for six years.
British singer (1963-2016)
It’s important to me that I should be free to express myself.
British singer (1963-2016)
It’s absolutely essential that we have the same safeguards that straight couples do. But I want more than a 50 percent chance of success. I don’t want to emulate that.
British singer (1963-2016)
I think for most of us, our biggest frailties are sexual.
British singer (1963-2016)
My American gay audience have continued to dance and sing to the music I make in a way that straight Americans haven’t. I am grateful to them for that.
British singer (1963-2016)