Raegan Cordero > Raegan's Quotes

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  • #1
    Jacqueline Harpman
    “I felt a surge of grief, I, who had never known men, as I stood in front of this man who had wanted to overcome fear and despair to enter eternity upright and furious.”
    Jacqueline Harpman, I Who Have Never Known Men

  • #2
    Marianne Williamson
    “Forgiveness is “selective remembering”—a conscious decision to focus on love and let the rest go. But the ego is relentless—it is “capable of suspiciousness at best and viciousness at worst.”
    Marianne Williamson, Return to Love

  • #3
    Marianne Williamson
    “The moment of surrender is not when life is over. It’s when it begins.”
    Marianne Williamson, Return to Love

  • #4
    Marianne Williamson
    “It takes courage...to endure the sharp pains of self discovery rather than choose to take the dull pain of unconsciousness that would last the rest of our lives.”
    Marianne Williamson, A Return to Love: Reflections on the Principles of "A Course in Miracles"

  • #5
    Marianne Williamson
    “We ask ourselves, who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, handsome, talented and fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be?”
    Marianne Williamson, A Return to Love: Reflections on the Principles of "A Course in Miracles"

  • #6
    Zora Neale Hurston
    “There are years that ask questions and years that answer.”
    Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God

  • #7
    “Nothing real can be threatened. Nothing unreal exists. Herein lies the peace of God.”
    Foundation for Inner Peace, A Course in Miracles

  • #8
    “Prayer is a way of asking for something. It is the medium of miracles. But the only meaningful prayer is for forgiveness, because those who have been forgiven have everything.”
    Foundation for Inner Peace, A Course in Miracles, Combined Volume: Text, Workbook for Students, Manual for Teachers

  • #9
    “As we go through the day we pause, when agitated or doubtful, and ask for the right thought or action. We constantly remind ourselves we are no longer running the show, humbly saying to ourselves many times each day “Thy will be done.” We are then in much less danger of excitement, fear, anger, worry, self-pity, or foolish decisions. We become much more efficient. We do not tire so easily, for we are not burning up energy foolishly as we did when we were trying to arrange life to suit ourselves.”
    Alcoholics Anonymous, Alcoholics Anonymous

  • #10
    “The feeling of having shared in a common peril is one element in the powerful cement which binds us.”
    Alcoholics Anonymous, Alcoholics Anonymous
    tags: aa

  • #11
    “If we still cling to something we will not let go, we ask God to help us be willing.”
    Alcoholics Anonymous, Alcoholics Anonymous

  • #12
    Jacqueline Harpman
    “I was forced to acknowledge too late, much too late, that I too had loved, that I was capable of suffering, and that I was human after all.”
    Jacqueline Harpman, I Who Have Never Known Men

  • #13
    Jacqueline Harpman
    “Because I want to know! Sometimes, you can use what you know, but that's not what counts most. I want to know everything there is to know. Not because it's any use, but for the pleasure of knowing, and now I demand that you teach me everything you know, even if I will never be able to use it.”
    Jacqueline Harpman, I Who Have Never Known Men

  • #14
    Jacqueline Harpman
    “I cannot mourn for what I have not known.”
    Jacqueline Harpman, I Who Have Never Known Men

  • #15
    Jacqueline Harpman
    “even a person raised in captivity learns to want, yearns to see beyond their cage. How much of our humanity is intrinsic? How much remains, when all else is stripped away?”
    Jacqueline Harpman, I Who Have Never Known Men

  • #16
    Rebecca Solnit
    “Most women fight wars on two fronts, one for whatever the putative topic is and one simply for the right to speak, to have ideas, to be acknowledged to be in possession of facts and truths, to have value, to be a human being.”
    Rebecca Solnit, Men Explain Things to Me

  • #17
    Betty Friedan
    “No woman gets an orgasm from shining the kitchen floor. ”
    Betty Friedan

  • #18
    Betty Friedan
    “Each suburban wife struggles with it alone. As she made the beds, shopped for groceries, matched slipcover material, ate peanut butter sandwiches with her children, chauffeured Cub Scouts and Brownies, lay beside her husband at night- she was afraid to ask even of herself the silent question-- 'Is this all?”
    Betty Friedan, The Feminine Mystique

  • #19
    Betty Friedan
    “What Friedan gave to the world was, "the problem that has no name." She not only named it but dissected it. The advances of science, the development of labor-saving appliances, the development of the suburbs: all had come together to offer women in the 1950s a life their mothers had scarcely dreamed of, free from rampant disease, onerous drudgery, noxious city streets. But the green lawns and big corner lots were isolating, the housework seemed to expand to fill the time available, and polio and smallpox were replaced by depression and alcoholism. All that was covered up in a kitchen conspiracy of denial...
    [i]nstead the problem was with the mystique of waxed floors and perfectly applied lipstick.”
    Betty Friedan, The Feminine Mystique

  • #20
    Betty Friedan
    “The real joke that history played on American women is not the one that makes people snigger, with cheap Freudian sophistication, at the dead feminists. It is the joke that Freudian thought played on living women, twisting the memory of the feminists into the man-eating phantom of the feminine mystique, shriveling the very wish to be more than just a wife and mother.”
    Betty Friedan, The Feminine Mystique

  • #21
    Fredrik Backman
    “Have you ever held a three-year-old by the hand on the way home from preschool?"

    "No."

    "You're never more important that you are then.”
    Fredrik Backman, Anxious People

  • #22
    “Maybe, then, this is how you try to bear the burden of the mystery with grace: by finding humility where you once saw self-pity, and opportunity where you once saw absence. By saying, ‘Even if I don’t get what I want, I have a good life,’ then paying closer attention to the small details that make that life beautiful. And by never forgetting that not knowing what will happen next also means that anything could.”
    Natasha Lunn, Conversations on Love



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