Quotes about Maturity
We reframe everything by one simple choice: I am accepting God's invitation to become a man. From there we interpret jobs, money, relationships, flat tires, bad dates, even our play time as the context in which the boy is becoming a man. We take an active role, asking our Father to speak to us, speak to our identity, to validate us. We step into our fears and accept "hardship as discipline.
— John Eldredge
Must live maturely, knowing that whatever else is happening, we must preserve the relationship if we would find our way.
— John Eldredge
I am careful how I bring my emotion, or my experience, to the need at hand. I don't ignore them; but neither do I let them dictate what I am praying. Our testimonies of previous results are valuable, and they may come into play. But this is a very dynamic story we find ourselves in, and as we mature in prayer, let us be careful not to assume this situation is exactly the same as the one before. You will want to ask God what needs to be prayed.
— John Eldredge
In 1797 a member of Congress argued that, while a liberal immigration policy was fine when the country was new and unsettled, now that America had reached its maturity and was fully populated, immigration should stop—an argument which has been repeated at regular intervals throughout American history.
— John F. Kennedy
The Via Media has slept in libraries; it is a substitute of infancy for manhood.
— John Henry Newman
The imagination of a boy is healthy, and the mature imagination of a man is healthy; but there is a space of life between, in which the soul is in a ferment, the character undecided, the way of life uncertain, the ambition thick-sighted: thence proceeds mawkishness, and all the thousand bitters which those men I speak of must necessarily taste in going over the following pages.
— John Keats
Maturation is the development from environmental support to self-support.
— Bruce Lee
Perfection does not exist -- you can always do better and you can always grow.
— Les Brown
My experience is that as soon as people are old enough to know better, they don't know anything at all.
— Oscar Wilde
To forgive and forget means to throw away dearly bought experience.
— Arthur Schopenhauer
Experience is necessary for us to grow.
— Marianne Williamson
A proverb is no proverb to you till life has illustrated it.
— John Keats