The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what fiction means.
No matter what love throws at you, you have to believe in it.
And if real life was like the movies, I should have lived happily ever after.
I am confident that, in the end, common sense and justice will prevail. I'm an optimist, brought up on the belief that if you wait to the end of the story, you get to see the good people live happily ever after.
And will I tell you that these three lived happily ever after? I will not, for no one ever does. But there was happiness. And they did live.
No one ever does live happily ever after, but we leave the children to find that out for themselves.
I just want to live happily ever after, every now and then.
I want to get married and have children and live happily ever after. That's important to me.
We may have forgotten how to feel. Nobody is teaching us how to live happily ever after, as we've heard in fairy tales.
[on the screenplay for "When Harry Met Sally"] It struck me that the movies had spent more than half a century saying, "They lived happily ever after" and the following quarter century warning that they'll be lucky to make it through the weekend. Possibly now we are now entering a third era in which the movies will be sounding a note of cautious optimism: You know, it just might work.
I find it next to impossible to remain politely silent when people prate to me about the glory of being given another chance to live happily ever after!
When you think about it, giving up your real personality is a small price to pay for the richness of living happily ever after with an actual man!
In a lot of ways, success is much harder than I thought it would be. I figured that you'd get here and then everything would be happily ever after. But, it's hard work, almost harder once you're successful because you've got to maintain it.
I don't write the kind of 'happily ever after' that romance readers enjoy.
Heavenly Father offers to you the greatest gift of all—eternal life—and the opportunity and infinite blessing of your own “happily ever after.”
After 1909, Monet drastically enlarged his brushstrokes, disintegrated his images, and broke through the taming constraints and delicacy of Impressionism for good. Nineteen gnarly paintings, starting in 1909 and carrying through his final seventeen years, finish off the notion that Monet went happily ever after into lily-land.
It would be a fine thing, in which I hardly dare believe, to pass our lives near each other, hypnotized by our dreams.
There is no need for revenge. Living happily ever after is a sign that you have not let the past beat you.
If you would stop analyzing everything and just look for things to appreciate, you would live happily ever after.
We need to set goals for ourselves. Start today...if you don't have any goals, make your first goal getting some goals. You probably won't start living happily ever after, but you may start living happily, purposefully, and with gratitude...Goals are gratitude in action. They give us the opportunity to build on what we already have. While achieving goals can be a lengthy process, we can learn to be grateful for each stage in the process of setting and meeting goals.
or simply: