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Quotes about Worry

Worrying causes us to be "all over the place," but seldom at home. One way to express the spiritual crisis of our time is to say that most of us have an address but cannot be found there. We know where we belong, but we keep being pulled away in many directions, as if we were still homeless. "All these other things" keep demanding our attention. They lead us so far from home that we eventually forget our true address, that is, the place where we can be addressed.
— Henri Nouwen
In a storm of struggles, I have tried to control the elements, clasp the fist tight so as to protect self and happiness. But stress can be an addiction, and worry can be our lunge for control, and we forget the answer to this moment is always yes because of Christ.
— Ann Voskamp
Become a worry-slapper. Treat frets like mosquitoes. Do you procrastinate when a bloodsucking bug lights on your skin? 'I'll take care of it in a moment.' Of course you don't! You give the critter the slap it deserves. Be equally decisive with anxiety.
— Max Lucado
I believe that worrying about a bad thing prepares you for it when it comes. If you worry, the bad thing doesn't hit you as hard. You can roll with the punch if you see it coming.
— Rainbow Rowell
Worry is a form of atheism. And so is most fear.
— Arianna Huffington
Are stress and worry evidence of a soul too lazy, too undisciplined, to keep gaze fixed on God?
— Ann Voskamp
Worry is irrelevant. It alters nothing. When was the last time you solved a problem by worrying about it?
— Max Lucado
No one can pray and worry at the same time.
— Max Lucado
No one can pray and worry at the same time. When we worry, we aren't praying. When we pray, we aren't worrying.
— Max Lucado
I worry that Jesus drinks himself to sleep when he hears me talk like this.
— Anne Lamott
why do we make it all seem like a crisis, over and over again? Why do we worry it all to death, like dogs with socks or chew-toys? 'Look at it this way...In a hundred years? - All new people.
— Anne Lamott
Twenty minutes later, my ski patrol woman did come back, rubbing her bare hands together. "How you doing?" she asked. At first the enthusiasm in her voice worried me, because she sounded as if we might now move on to calisthenics.
— Anne Lamott