Quotes about Anxiety
If pleasures are greatest in anticipation, just remember that this is also true of trouble.
— Elbert Hubbard
The greatest mistake you can make in life is continually fearing that you'll make one.
— Elbert Hubbard
The thing we fear we bring to pass.
— Elbert Hubbard
Anxiety," Kierkegaard said, "is the dizziness of freedom." This freedom of which men speak, for which they fight, seems to some people a perilous thing. It has to be earned at a bitter cost and then—it has to be lived with. For freedom makes a huge requirement of every human being. With freedom comes responsibility. For the person who is unwilling to grow up, the person who does not want to carry his own weight, this is a frightening prospect.
— Eleanor Roosevelt
Worry is a form of atheism. And so is most fear.
— Arianna Huffington
There is a syndrome in sports called 'paralysis by analysis.'
— Arthur Ashe
Yes, take your times seriously. Yes, know that you are judged by the terrible sins of your times. Yes, you do well to faint with fear and foreboding at what is coming on the world. And yet rejoice. Rejoice. The Lord is at hand. Have no anxiety. Pray.
— Frederick Buechner
I more fear what is within me than what comes from without.
— Martin Luther
How foolish it is, then, to puff yourself up with pride or berate yourself with worry. Think of the boundless abyss of the past behind you and the infinite future stretching out ahead. From this perspective, how small are your achievements—and how petty your troubles.
— Marcus Aurelius
The result of the British war is a source of anxiety. For it is ascertained that the approaches to the island are protected by astonishing masses of cliff. Moreover, it is now known that there isn't a pennyweight of silver in that island, nor any hope of booty except from slaves, among whom I don't[Pg 283] suppose you can expect any instructed in literature or music.
— Cicero
We're stretched thin, all of us; we vibrate; we quiver, we're always on the alert. Reign of terror, they used to say, but terror does not exactly reign. Instead it paralyzes. Hence the unnatural quiet.
— Margaret Atwood
Now I wanted to be acknowledged, but I feared it.
— Margaret Atwood