Quotes about Individuality
We see them come. We see them go. Some are fast. And some are slow. Some are high. And some are slow. Not one of them is like another. Don't ask us why. Go ask your mother.
— Sean Covey
No one is better or worse than anyone else, just different. You're okay, they're okay.
— Sean Covey
If you decide to just go with the flow, you'll end up where the flow goes, which is usually downhill, often leading to a big pile of sludge and a life of unhappiness. You'll end up doing what everyone else is doing.
— Sean Covey
Caesar's image is branded on lifeless metal, while God's image is placed on life itself. We are God's coins, divine image-bearers. Caesar's coins are all the same, but people are not. Caesar is about uniformity, mass production, sameness. God is about diversity, every person with unique DNA and no one with the same fingerprint.
— Shane Claiborne
I tell people all the time, preached a couple Sundays about it. I'm for everybody. You may not agree with me, but to me it's not my job to try to straighten everybody out.
— Joel Osteen
We live together, we act on, and react to one another; but always, and in all circumstances, we are by ourselves.
— Aldous Huxley
Spoons and skimmers you can be undistinguishably together; but vases and statues require each a pedestal for itself.
— Ralph Waldo Emerson
My real soul...? It's real only when it's independent...
— Ayn Rand
This is a great sin, to be born with a head which is too quick. It is not good to be different from our brothers, but it is evil to be superior to them.
— Ayn Rand
Most people feel that they rise in their own eyes, if others want them. I feel that others live up to me, if they want me. And that is the way you feel, too, Hank, about yourself—whether you admit it or not.
— Ayn Rand
I know what I want up to the age of two hundred. Know what you want in life and go after it. I worship individuals for their highest possibilities as individuals, and I loathe humanity, for its failure to live up to these possibilities.
— Ayn Rand
They kept their secret from the knowledge of others, not as a shameful guilt, but as a thing that was immaculately theirs, beyond anyone's right of debate or appraisal.
— Ayn Rand