Quotes about Loss
Right, but you know, what would any of us lose by losing our possessions. Maybe we would gain something, like relationships, like the beauty of good friends, intimacy, you know what I mean, man? Like we wouldn't be losing anything if we lost our stuff, we'd be gaining everything.
— Donald Miller
Stories live and die on a single question: What's at stake? If nothing can be gained or lost, nobody cares.
— Donald Miller
We must show people the cost of not doing business with us.
— Donald Miller
PERHAPS ONE OF the reasons I've avoided having a clear ambition is that second you stand up and point toward a horizon, you realize how much there is to lose. It's always been this way.
— Donald Miller
The family of Abraham will no longer feel temptations, and the family of Job will not feel afflictions. The family of David will no longer mourn loss and death, the family of Paul will not feel thorns in the flesh, and the family of Lazarus will no longer be afflicted by poverty and sores.
— JC Ryle
They love us, heal us, teach us, make us laugh and sometimes break our hearts with their passing.
— Jack Canfield
Better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.
— Jack Canfield
A pain stabbed my heart, as it did every time I saw a girl I loved who was going the opposite direction in this too-big world.
— Jack Kerouac
Bitterness is one of the deadliest emotions we ever feel. You can't look forward when you're bitter, only backward—thinking about what you've lost, stuck in the past, despairing because it's gone. In the end, it devours all hope.
— Lynn Austin
is it better not to fall in love at all, or to love someone for a little while, even if you have to say good-bye?
— Lynn Austin
I will thank Him for all that He has given me, not curse Him for all that I've lost.
— Lynn Austin
Bitterness is one of the deadliest emotions we ever feel. You can't look forward when you're bitter, only backward - thinking about what you've lost, stuck in the past, despairing because it's gone. In the end, it devours all hope.
— Lynn Austin