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Non Judgmental Quotes

Quotes tagged as "non-judgmental" Showing 1-15 of 15
Steve Goodier
“Of course we need to accept ourselves as we are, but we can't stop there. We also need to value ourselves enough make needed changes.”
Steve Goodier

Rasheed Ogunlaru
“When you feel that others are lacking and failing ....
first assess the skill, style, quality, results, mindset,
support, professionalism and spirit with which
you yourself play the game.”
Rasheed Ogunlaru

John Kuypers
“To not judge is to be like a peach. We shrink our space by giving up controlling others. Instead, we focus on controlling ourselves. We set others free to be who they are.”
John Kuypers, The Non-judgmental Christian: Five Lessons That Will Revolutionize Your Relationships

John Kuypers
“The present moment is the definition of eternity. It has never not been the present moment. This isn't scriptural or unscriptural - it is merely a logical fact.”
John Kuypers, The Non-judgmental Christian: Five Lessons That Will Revolutionize Your Relationships

Martin Luther King Jr.
“I judge people by their own principles—not by my own.”
Martin Luther King Jr.

John Kuypers
“One of the greatest joys of not judging others is becoming capable of discerning God's will in a difficult situation.”
John Kuypers, The Non-judgmental Christian: Five Lessons That Will Revolutionize Your Relationships

Debasish Mridha
“The highest freedom of mind comes from becoming non-judgmental.”
Debasish Mridha

“What Gay People do in their Bedroom, don't have sh!t to do with me.”
Basimah Rasha, The Epitome Of Truth

“Mindfulness” is the purest mindlessness. It is the great and perverse desire to annihilate consciousness and exist in an eternal now of unthinking perception of nothing at all. It is the most nihilistic vision there has ever been. It is “nirvana” – absolute nothingness, the state of infinite anti-consciousness.”
Jack Tanner, Zarathustra's Out-of-Body Experience: How Humans Become Angels

“Meditation has countless benefits - from better health to increased focus to a deeper sense of calm - but the biggie is the ability to respond instead of react to your impulses and urges. In meditation, instead of succumbing to deeply rooted habits of the mind like desire & aversion, you simply watch what comes up in your head non-judgementally.”
Dan Harris, 10% Happier

“Our entire purpose is to solve the ultimate problems of existence. The task of the meditators and the mindfulness advocates is to flee from every problem, solve no problems, and become animals, devoid of consciousness, untroubled by judgment. They dream of living non-judgmentally in the moment. That’s what cows do. The message of Eastern mysticism and New Ageism is Become a Cow!”
Jack Tanner, Zarathustra's Out-of-Body Experience: How Humans Become Angels

“Mindfulness opposes judgment, conceptualization, words, language, reason, logic, knowledge, understanding, science, philosophy, mathematics, history, intellectualism, learning from the past and planning for the future. It reduces thoughtful humans to the state of thoughtless animals, prisoners of the ignorance of the moment, overwhelmed by primitive sense-certainty. And this is sold as a desirable state, something we should all aspire to!”
Thomas Stark, The Stairway to Consciousness: The Birth of Self-Awareness from Unconscious Archetypes

Henri J.M. Nouwen
“There is a dreadful emptiness in the spiritual fatherhood. No power, no success, no popularity, no easy satisfaction. But that same dreadful emptiness is also the place of true freedom. It is the place where there is “nothing left to lose.” There I am free to receive the burdens of others without any need to evaluate, categorize, or analyze. There, in that completely non-judgmental state of being. I felt no desire to ask questions about the past or to speculate about the future. Each time we touch that sacred emptiness of non-demanding love, heaven and earth tremble and there is great “rejoicing among the angels of God.”
Henri J.M. Nouwen, The Return of the Prodigal Son: A Story of Homecoming

AVIS Viswanathan
“You are at peace with your world when you don’t judge others. Learning to be non-judgmental is an art. And you learn this art through discipline. You learn by choosing not to comment, not to offer opinion on the actions, comments and lives of others. Being silent is key to being disciplined – and to being happy!”
AVIS Viswanathan