Hayley > Hayley's Quotes

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  • #1
    Pema Chödrön
    “As human beings, not only do we seek resolution, but we also feel that we deserve resolution. However, not only do we not deserve resolution, we suffer from resolution. We don't deserve resolution; we deserve something better than that. We deserve our birthright, which is the middle way, an open state of mind that can relax with paradox and ambiguity.”
    Pema Chödrön, When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times

  • #2
    Pema Chödrön
    “We are all capable of becoming fundamentalists because we get addicted to other people's wrongness.”
    Pema Chodron

  • #3
    Pema Chödrön
    “We think that if we just meditated enough or jogged enough or ate perfect food, everything would be perfect. But from the point of view of someone who is awake, that’s death. Seeking security or perfection, rejoicing in feeling confirmed and whole, self contained and comfortable, is some kind of death. It doesn’t have any fresh air. There’s no room for something to come in and interrupt all that. We are killing the moment by controlling our experience.”
    Pema Chödrön, When Things Fall Apart: Heart Advice for Difficult Times

  • #4
    Franklin Delano Roosevelt
    “I ask you to judge me by the enemies I have made.”
    Franklin D. Roosevelt

  • #5
    Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.
    “Don't flatter yourself that friendship authorizes you to say disagreeable things to your intimates. The nearer you come into relation with a person, the more necessary do tact and courtesy become. Except in cases of necessity, which are rare, leave your friend to learn unpleasant things from his enemies; they are ready enough to tell them.”
    Oliver Wendall Holmes

  • #6
    Kelsang Gyatso
    “Normally we divide the external world into that which we consider to be good or valuable, bad or worthless, or neither. Most of the time these discriminations are incorrect or have little meaning. For example, our habitual way of categorizing people as friends, enemies, and strangers depending on how they make us feel is both incorrect and a great obstacle to developing impartial love for all living beings. Rather than holding so tightly to our discriminations of the external world, it would be much more beneficial if we learned to discriminate between valuable and worthless states of mind.”
    Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, Transform Your Life: A Blissful Journey

  • #7
    “All this, and much more, she had accepted, for, after all, living does mean accepting the loss of one joy after another, not even joys in her case, mere possibilities of improvement. She thought of the recurrent waves of pain that for some reason or other she and her husband had had to endure; of the in visible giants hurting her boy in some unimaginable fashion; of the incalculable amount of tenderness contained in the world; of the fate of this tenderness, which is either crushed or wasted, or transformed into madness; of neglected children humming to themselves in unswept corners; of beautiful weeds that cannot hide from the farmer.”
    Nabokov Vladimir



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