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Motivational Book Quotes

Quotes tagged as "motivational-book" Showing 1-17 of 17
Boniface Sagini
“So, the rationale of having written this book is to say an inspiring word to a lot of people who are hurting, crying and sounding defeatist, an inspiring word to millions of people who are living in pain and indigence. I wrote it for a young chap who hopes there is no life after death so that he can finally rest, for a dejected ailing woman who thinks God enjoys torturing her and for some hopeless lad who threatens his friends he’d shoot himself. I wrote it for them and for myself.”
Boniface Sagini, Thrills and Chills: Trudging Through Life

Shukla Ji
“When you close your eyes, do you actually stop seeing?
Who is observing the darkness then?”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“Emotions and feelings are like this sand. Circumstances are like the beach. You, my dear, are like your sunglasses. If you are in a dire circumstance, emotions and feelings, the less pleasurable ones, perhaps, the more painful ones will cling to you. On the other hand, if the circumstances you are in are the best, perhaps, the one with a lover or family, a pleasant set of emotions and feelings cling to your personality. Just like the sand clinging to your glasses is natural on a beach, emotions and feelings clinging to your personality are natural products of diverse circumstances.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“ Perhaps, it is the words, and in turn, the many meanings that divide us. Neither the body nor the mind; Neither the distance nor the time, just words.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“Meditation is a transaction, you take back energy from the moments that drained you and give them a new meaning.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“I imagine standing in the center of this house of mirrors and looking at my infinite reflections.
Each of the personalities we live, if they are just reflections on the mirror, then they are illusions. What we strive for is to unlearn the vocabulary, energy, and awareness of each of these reflections to reach our dissolving ‘self’, the one standing in the center. The observer.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“Everything in that flow – the many pains and pleasures – are just an ephemeral burst of energy. At the end of it, they are as much on the fabric of nothingness as life. It means nothing. We mean nothing.
The atman has a purpose, not the identity we assume.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“The baggage of past memories, the present contradictions, and the many choices from the future. “They are all just words,” I say, as I become aware of my breath. My bong feels ignored, my mind feels betrayed and the incessant pain in my chest ceases. I drop everything.
I let go.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“When we become self-aware, we realize what kind of partner will be happy with us. More than our happiness, we respect the happiness of the other, and in that, we find the right kind of love.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“Our ego feeds on the validation of others, our self feeds on evolution with others. That our purpose, perhaps, is to survive but survival here is not to cut the throat of ‘others’ but to evolve with them.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“Kill the Buddha. In the desire of becoming Buddha, you walk away from it. To desire peace is to invite conflict. To pursue calm is to ruffle up anger within. Don’t you get it? You are in conflict to remove conflict.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“Desires incite thoughts. Thoughts transpire actions,” Buddha smiles, “I never say no to desire. To judge desire is to add words. To not desire is just an act in illusion.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Shukla Ji
“Mistakes you must make, the pain you should face, cry you must for it is the journey. The journey is what it is all about,” Buddha says. “You are a human after all.”
Shukla Ji, Buddha's House of Mirrors

Sarah Hays Coomer
“Physical disobedience is about defying not only external forces but our own physical and emotional pain by meeting them with repetitive acts of healing.”
Sarah Hays Coomer, Physical Disobedience: An Unruly Guide to Health and Stamina for the Modern Feminist