top of page
"Your fear will always be triggered by your creativity, because creativity asks you to enter into the realms of uncertain outcome, and fear hates uncertain outcome."
Standard
Customized
More

"The most dangerous negativity comes from ourselves in the form of doubts, fears and unreasonable self-criticisms."
Author Name
Personal Development

"It is a great mystery to me how the problems of others seem like simple arithmetic while my own appear as complicated as a calculus equation."
Author Name
Personal Development

"Beating heroin is child's play compared to beating your childhood."
Author Name
Personal Development

"Sniffing glue is a homeless nonbeliever's prayer."
Author Name
Personal Development

"The negative way of thinking based on constant complaints, strains, and objections of discontent steals our energy."
Author Name
Personal Development

"Words don't have the power to hurt you, unless that person meant more to you than you are willing to confess."
Author Name
Personal Development

"Who has fear? The one who has greed has fear."
Author Name
Personal Development

"For how long are the people who seek for the approval of others keep putting their self-worth in the hands of people?"
Author Name
Personal Development

"Visiting the sick' is an orgasm of superiority in the contemplation of our neighbor's helplessness."
Author Name
Personal Development

"Physiology and Psychology are not at all separate from each other. Rather they are deeply intertwined."
Author Name
Personal Development
More

"I was struck - not for the first time in my years of travel - by how isolating contemporary American society can seem by comparison. Where I came from, we have shriveled down the notion of what constitutes 'a family unit' to such a tiny scale that it would probably be unrecognizable as a family to anybody in one of these big, loose, enveloping Hmong clans. You almost need an electron microscope to study the modern Western family these days."
Society

"Because what my gradmother did with her fine coat (the loveliest thing she would ever own) is what all women of that generation (and before) did for their families and their husbands and their children. They cut up the finest and proudest parts of themselves and gave it all away. They repatterned what was theirs and shaped it for others. They went without. They were the last ones to eat at supper, and they were the first ones to get up every morning, warming the cold kitchen for another day spent caring for everyone else. This was the only thing they knew how to do. This was their guiding verb and their defining principle of life: They gave."
Sacrifice

"Do what you love to do, and do it with both seriousness and lightness. At least then you will know that you have tried and that--whatever the outcome--you have traveled a noble path."
Passion

"I know I'm not a self-indulgent idiot; I also know I'm not the second coming of Deepak Chopra. If I had believed either of those, or both, as some people do when they get famous, that's when the mental illness arrives."
Psychology

"Which is - you know, like check it out, I'm pretty young, I'm only about 40 years old. I still have maybe another four decades of work left in me. And it's exceedingly likely that anything I write from this point forward is going to be judged by the world as the work that came after the freakish success of my last book, right?"
Success

"And always remember that people's judgements about you are none of your business."
Self

"Devo farmi le ossa is how they say it in Italian. "I need to make my bones."
Growth

"We need courage to take ourselves seriously, to look closely and without flinching, to regard the things that frighten us in life and art with wonder."
Courage

"But doesn't that make sense? That the infinite would be, indeed... infinite? That even the most holy amongst us would only be able to see scattered pictures of the eternal picture at any given time? And that maybe if we could collect those pieces and compare them, a story about God would begin to emerge that resembles and includes everyone?"
Faith

"The great Sufi poet and philosopher Rumi once advised his students to write down the three things they most wanted in life. If any item on the list clashes with any other item, Rumi warned, you are destined for unhappiness. Better to live a life of single-pointed focus, he taught. But what about the benefits of living harmoniously among extremes? What if you could somehow create an expansive enough life that you could synchronize seemingly incongruous opposites into a worldview that excludes nothing?"
Philosophy
bottom of page