Healing Toolbox Bruce Dickson > Healing Toolbox's Quotes

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  • #1
    David Zindell
    “We walk the brink of racial suicide because we were smart enough to make atomic bombs and stupid enough to use them.”
    David Zindell, Neverness

  • #2
    Alfred Bester
    “You pigs, you. You rut like pigs, is all. You got the most in you, and you use the least. You hear me, you? Got a million in you and spend pennies. Got a genius in you and think crazies. Got a heart in you and feel empties. All a you. Every you...'

    [...]

    Take a war to make you spend. Take a jam to make you think. Take a challenge to make you great. Rest of the time you sit around lazy, you. Pigs, you! All right, God damn you! I challenge you, me. Die or live and be great. Blow yourselves to Christ gone or come and find me, Gully Foyle, and I make you men. I make you great. I give you the stars.”
    Alfred Bester, The Stars My Destination

  • #3
    Alfred Bester
    “This was a Golden Age, a time of high adventure, rich living and hard dying... but nobody thought so. This was a future of fortune and theft, pillage and rapine, culture and vice... but nobody admitted it. This was an age of extremes, a fascinating century of freaks... but nobody loved it.”
    Alfred Bester, The Stars My Destination

  • #4
    Alfred Bester
    “There's got to be more to life than just living," Foyle said to the robot.

    "Then find it for yourself, sir. Don't ask the world to stop moving because you have doubts."

    "Why can't we all move forward together?"

    "Because you're all different. You're not lemmings. Some must lead, and hope that the rest will follow."

    "Who leads?"

    "The men who must...driven men, compelled men."

    "Freak men."

    "You're all freaks, sir. But you always have been freaks. Life is a freak. That's its hope and glory."

    "Thank you very much."

    "My pleasure, sir."

    "You've saved the day."

    "Always a lovely day somewhere, sir," the robot beamed. Then it fizzed, jangled, and collapsed.”
    Alfred Bester, The Stars My Destination

  • #5
    Alfred Bester
    “No," Foyle roared. "Let them hear this. Let them hear everything."

    "You're insane, man. You've handed a loaded gun to children."

    "Stop treating them like children and they'll stop behaving like children. Who the hell are you to play monitor?"

    "What are you talking about?"

    "Stop treating them like children. Explain the loaded gun to them. Bring it all out into the open." Foyle laughed savagely. "I've ended the last star-chamber conference in the world. I've blown that last secret wide open. No more secrets from now on.... No more telling the children what's best for them to know.... Let 'em all grow up. It's about time."

    "Christ, he is insane."

    "Am I? I've handed life and death back to the people who do the living and the dying. The common man's been whipped and led long enough by driven men like us.... Compulsive men... Tiger men who can't help lashing the world before them. We're all tigers, the three of us, but who the hell are we to make decisions for the world just because we're compulsive? Let the world make its own choice between life and death. Why should we be saddled with the responsibility?"

    "We're not saddled," Y'ang-Yeovil said quietly. "We're driven. We're forced to seize responsibility that the average man shirks."

    "Then let him stop shirking it. Let him stop tossing his duty and guilt onto the shoulders of the first freak who comes along grabbing at it. Are we to be scapegoats for the world forever?"

    "Damn you!" Dagenham raged. "Don't you realize that you can't trust people? They don't know enough for their own good."

    "Then let them learn or die. We're all in this together. Let's live together or die together."

    "D'you want to die in their ignorance? You've got to figure out how to get those slugs back without blowing everything wide open."

    "No. I believe in them. I was one of them before I turned tiger. They can all turn uncommon if they're kicked awake like I was.”
    Alfred Bester, The Stars My Destination

  • #6
    Chris Hedges
    “If we really saw war, what war does to young minds and bodies, it would be impossible to embrace the myth of war. If we had to stand over the mangled corpses of schoolchildren killed in Afghanistan and listen to the wails of their parents, we would not be able to repeat clichés we use to justify war. This is why war is carefully sanitized. This is why we are given war's perverse and dark thrill but are spared from seeing war's consequences. The mythic visions of war keep it heroic and entertaining…

    The wounded, the crippled, and the dead are, in this great charade, swiftly carted offstage. They are war's refuse. We do not see them. We do not hear them. They are doomed, like wandering spirits, to float around the edges of our consciousness, ignored, even reviled. The message they tell is too painful for us to hear. We prefer to celebrate ourselves and our nation by imbibing the myths of glory, honor, patriotism, and heroism, words that in combat become empty and meaningless.”
    Chris Hedges, Death of the Liberal Class

  • #7
    Chris Hedges
    “We now live in a nation where doctors destroy health, lawyers destroy justice, universities destroy knowledge, governments destroy freedom, the press destroys information, religion destroys morals, and our banks destroy the economy.”
    Chris Hedges

  • #8
    Iain McGilchrist
    “Compared with music all communication by words is shameless; words dilute and brutalise; words depersonalise; words make the uncommon common.”
    Iain McGilchrist, The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World

  • #9
    Iain McGilchrist
    “Meaning emerges from engagement with the world, not from abstract contemplation of it.”
    Iain McGilchrist, The Divided Brain and the Search for Meaning

  • #10
    Iain McGilchrist
    “Emotion is inseparable from the body in which it is felt, and emotion is also the basis for our engagement with the world.”
    Iain McGilchrist, The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World

  • #11
    Iain McGilchrist
    “Every thing that purports to be the truth is, according to Heidegger, inevitably an approximation and true things, things that really are, rather than as we may apprehend them, are in themselves ineffable, ungraspable.”
    Iain McGilchrist, The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World

  • #12
    Iain McGilchrist
    “If the detached, highly focused attention of the left hemisphere is brought to bear on living things, and not later resolved into the whole picture by right-hemisphere attention, which yields depth and context, it is destructive. .”
    Iain McGilchrist, The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World

  • #13
    Iain McGilchrist
    “Goethe wisely wrote, however, that ‘we are, and ought to be, obscure to ourselves, turned outwards, and working upon the world which surrounds us.’13 We see ourselves, and therefore come to know ourselves, only indirectly, through our engagement with the world at large.”
    Iain McGilchrist, The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World

  • #14
    Drunvalo Melchizedek
    “an internal form of acting, a meditation, a meditation that consciously reconnects you to all life everywhere. It is what the Taoists say: The way to do is to be.”
    Drunvalo Melchizedek, The Ancient Secret of the Flower of Life, Vol. 1

  • #15
    Drunvalo Melchizedek
    “We’re going to discuss only four or five different problems the Earth has, though there are multiple different scenarios going on. If any one of these scenarios were to break down, all life on the planet would eventually die. And at the moment, they’re all about to break down — it’s just a matter of which one breaks down first. And whenever one system goes, then all the rest of them will go eventually, and that’s it, there won’t be any more human life. It will be over with, and we’ll end up just like Mars or the dinosaurs. A few years ago, around the turn of this century, there were thirty million species of life forms on Earth — thirty million different species of life. In 1993 there were about fifteen million. It took billions of years to create these life forms, and in less than a blink of an eye, a mere hundred years, half of the life on this dear Earth is dead. Around thirty species a minute are now becoming extinct somewhere. If you were to watch this planet from space, it would appear to be dying very, very rapidly. Yet we’re going on as though nothing’s happening and everything’s great. We’re sticking money in the bank and driving our cars and just wiggling right on. Yet from an honest point of view, we have a real life-and-death problem going on here on Earth, and few people seem to be really serious about it.”
    Drunvalo Melchizedek, The Ancient Secret of the Flower of Life, Vol. 1

  • #16
    Pema Chödrön
    “You are the sky. Everything else – it’s just the weather.”
    Pema Chödrön

  • #17
    “So we come upon the radical idea that happiness is not about how many good times we've had and bummers we haven't had, but from being willing to greet life as it occurs, to meet it and respond in its gush and flow. We don't attach ourselves to the contents of life, but we celebrate the very process of being alive.”
    Christine Caldwell, Getting Our Bodies Back: Recovery, Healing, and Transformation through Body-Centered Psychotherapy

  • #18
    Adyashanti
    “If you prefer smoke over fire
    then get up now and leave.
    For I do not intend to perfume
    your mind's clothing
    with more sooty knowledge.

    No, I have something else in mind.
    Today I hold a flame in my left hand
    and a sword in my right.
    There will be no damage control today.

    For God is in a mood
    to plunder your riches and
    fling you nakedly
    into such breathtaking poverty
    that all that will be left of you
    will be a tendency to shine.

    So don't just sit around this flame
    choking on your mind.
    For this is no campfire song
    to mindlessly mantra yourself to sleep with.

    Jump now into the space
    between thoughts
    and exit this dream
    before I burn the damn place down.”
    Adyashanti

  • #19
    Adyashanti
    “Do not think that enlightenment is going to make you special, it’s not. If you feel special in any way, then enlightenment has not occurred. I meet a lot of people who think they are enlightened and awake simply because they have had a very moving spiritual experience. They wear their enlightenment on their sleeve like a badge of honor. They sit among friends and talk about how awake they are while sipping coffee at a cafe. The funny thing about enlightenment is that when it is authentic, there is no one to claim it. Enlightenment is very ordinary; it is nothing special. Rather than making you more special, it is going to make you less special. It plants you right in the center of a wonderful humility and innocence. Everyone else may or may not call you enlightened, but when you are enlightened the whole notion of enlightenment and someone who is enlightened is a big joke. I use the word enlightenment all the time; not to point you toward it but to point you beyond it. Do not get stuck in enlightenment.”
    Adyashanti

  • #20
    Adyashanti
    “My speaking is meant to shake you awake, not to tell you how to dream better.”
    Adyashanti, Emptiness Dancing

  • #21
    Adyashanti
    “Enlightenment is nothing more than the complete absence of resistance to what is. End of story.”
    Adyashanti, Emptiness Dancing



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