Quotes about Loss
I have experienced loss in my life, but the thing that brings you back is your faith.
— Octavia Spencer
When you have a major loss in your life, the first thing you need to do is tell God exactly how you feel.
— Rick Warren
It often takes suffering and lost in order to remind us of how precious life is.
— Rob Bell
Grief is a form of validation; it says the wound mattered. It mattered. You mattered. That's not the way life was supposed to go.
— John Eldredge
To be a follower of the Crucified means, sooner or later, a personal encounter with the cross. And the cross always entails loss. The great symbol of Christianity means sacrifice and no one who calls himself a Christian can evade this stark fact.
— Elisabeth Elliot
Every parting gives a foretaste of death; every coming together again a foretaste of the resurrection.
— Arthur Schopenhauer
We all remember epochs in our experience when some dear expectation dies, or some new motive is born.
— George Eliot
Even much stronger mortals than Fred Vincy hold half their rectitude in the mind of the being they love best. The theater of all my actions is fallen, said an antique personage when his chief friend was dead, and they are fortunate who get a theater where the audience demands their best.
— George Eliot
I thought we should never part with that while we lived; everything is going away from us; the end of our lives will have nothing in it like the beginning!
— George Eliot
Our dead are never dead to us until we have forgotten them.
— George Eliot
I cannot bear to think that any one should die and leave no love behind
— George Eliot
Marriage, which has been the bourne of so many narratives, is still a great beginning, as it was to Adam and Eve, who kept their honey-moon in Eden, but had their first little one among the thorns and thistles of the wilderness. It is still the beginning of the home epic - the gradual conquest or irremediable loss of that complete union which make the advancing years a climax, and age the harvest of sweet memories in common.
— George Eliot