“I hate Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and half of Fridays.”
Anonymous
The line delivers a deadpan declaration of identity. Wednesday Addams is not making a costume choice or trying to fit into a holiday tradition. She is simply being herself, and Halloween, with all its gothic trappings, happens to look a lot like her everyday existence. The joke works because it inverts the normal expectation: rather than dressing up for the occasion, she is the occasion. It is a quiet, confident refusal to be ordinary.
This quote has become a favorite for people who feel most at home in darker aesthetics or who simply do not conform to cheerful social norms. It validates the idea that being different is not a performance but a genuine way of living. For fans of the character specifically, it captures what makes Wednesday so appealing: she is completely unbothered by how others perceive her, and that composure reads as both funny and quietly inspiring to anyone who has ever felt like an outsider.
Wednesday Addams is a fictional character who originated in the single-panel cartoons of Charles Addams, which appeared in The New Yorker starting in the 1930s. She has since appeared in television series, animated productions, and feature films across several decades. Each adaptation gives the character slightly different traits, but her defining quality remains consistent: a morbid, unflappable demeanor delivered without irony. She has become one of popular culture's most enduring icons of outsider identity.
“I hate Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and half of Fridays.”
Anonymous
“I am not afraid of storms, for I am learning how to sail my ship.”
Louisa May Alcott · Little Women, 1868
“Even the darkest night will end and the sun will rise.”
Victor Hugo · Les Misérables, 1862
“The secret of getting ahead is getting started.”
Mark Twain
“I am so clever that sometimes I don't understand a single word of what I am saying.”
Oscar Wilde · The Remarkable Rocket, 1888
“Well-behaved women seldom make history.”
Laurel Thatcher Ulrich · "Vertuous Women Found," American Quarterly, 1976
“If you're going through hell, keep going.”
Winston Churchill
“Nothing is worth more than this day.”
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
“Believe you can and you're halfway there.”
Theodore Roosevelt
“Go confidently in the direction of your dreams. Live the life you have imagined.”
Henry David Thoreau · Walden, 1854
“It does not matter how slowly you go as long as you do not stop.”
Confucius
“I can shake off everything as I write; my sorrows disappear, my courage is reborn.”
Anne Frank · The Diary of a Young Girl, 1947