The line that most changed my life is John's accusal of Martha: "Why can't you love him just because he's a little boy?"
I fell apart when I first read that. I realized how conditional my love was for others, esp. my husband and children. I was always trying to change them, fix them, make them be what would best suit my needs. Ever since, I've been mindful of that weakness of mine. I strive to break through my selfishness and access the pure love that, I believe, dwells within each of us.
The close runner-up is Adam's line to John, when John envisions the plight of humanity in the form of an airplane wreck. Then he sees the wreckage transforming into a scene of progress, of positive motion. Adam tells him, "It's not so bad. You just don't understand how it works."
Okay, that is incredibly profound. I think so much of our suffering is based on a value system that's grounded in temporary, earthly ways of thinking. We don't understand what's going on here. I firmly believe that someday we will understand why things were the way they were, and we'll see all the goodness that comes out of our painful experiences. All that we've gained through our losses.
Fave scenes--so hard to pick! Every scene with Adam. My #1 is the very last page, when Adam rejoices over his dolphin ride. I still get chills just thinking about it. The emotion in that image is so strong--esp. the "triumphant shout." This kind of joy is what we're made for.
I also love the dream scene, when the adult Adam hands M the paper she's looking for. I feel that my Thomas plays this same role in my life--gives me exactly what I most need but can't find on my own.
I also LOVE the testing scene, when Adam plays dumb. And the sky tram scene. These show such sophistication on Adam's part. I was impressed with his awareness and sensitivity. Made me realize much more is going on inside of people than we can guess at, esp. people we assume to be unintelligent.
In fact, the whole book changed the way I view intelligence. Adam's "relationship alphabet" is the perfect example. Letters, for him, have meaning because they represent loved ones. This is supreme intelligence, to live life according to love.
Other parts that delighted me:
The smurf pool scene, when M realizes she's not the only one faking it at Harvard. "Smurf is a good man."
The description of the bells sounding on Easter morning.
And I still laugh out loud when I read the refrigerator-magnet phrases M and J come up with.