Quotes about Individuality
We all create the person we become by our choices as we go through life. In a very real sense, by the time we are adult, we are the sum total of the choices we have made.
— Eleanor Roosevelt
You not only have a right to be an individual. You have a responsibility.
— Eleanor Roosevelt
But the courage to go against a sweep of feeling, to be an awkward minority, to stand up and be counted, even when it makes one unpopular, is not as prevalent as it should be. We have a long way to go to achieve responsible citizenship and common self-respecting humanity.
— Eleanor Roosevelt
Write only if you cannot live without writing. Write only what you alone can write.
— Elie Wiesel
We must not see any person as an abstraction. Instead, we must see in every person a universe with its own secrets, with its own treasures, with its own sources of anguish, and with some measure of triumph.
— Elie Wiesel
I do not try to dance better than anyone else. I only try to dance better than myself.
— Arianna Huffington
The two qualities which chiefly inspire regard and affection [are] that a thing is your own and that it is your only one.
— Aristotle
The hand or foot, when separated from the body, retains indeed its name, but totally changes its nature, because it is completely divested of its uses and of its powers.
— Aristotle
Different men seek after happiness in different ways and by different means, and so make for themselves different modes of life and forms of government.
— Aristotle
My potential is more than can be expressed within the bounds of my race or ethnic identity.
— Arthur Ashe
I prefer to be true to myself, even at the hazard of incurring the ridicule of others, rather than to be false, and incur my own abhorrence
— Frederick Douglass
God has given different gifts for different people. There is no basis for feeling inferior to another who has a different gift. Once it is realised that we shall be judged by the gift we have received, rather than the gift we have not, one is completely delivered from a false sense of inferiority.
— Bishop Fulton J. Sheen