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Quotes about Community

When we agree to (or get tricked into) being part of something bigger than our own wired, fixated minds, we are saved. When we search for something larger than our own selves to hook into, we can come through whatever life throws at us.
— Anne Lamott
Ultimately we're all just walking each other home.
— Anne Lamott
This is the work of the Holy Spirit and our operating instructions, to be cooling breezes to sad or worried people, including ourselves, in this sometimes hot stuffy joint [the world].
— Anne Lamott
This is all that restoration requires most of the time, that one person not give up.
— Anne Lamott
We have to make ourselves available to one another, or we can't experience goodness. It's not so much us seeking God, tracking Her down with a butterfly net; it's agreeing to be found. The Old Girl reaches out to everyone and wants to include us in this beautiful, weird, sometimes anguished life. All people: go figure.
— Anne Lamott
You can't stop the raging storm, but singing can change the hearts and spirits of the people who are together on that ship.
— Anne Lamott
Look around and see whom you can serve.
— Anne Lamott
I would give her the same advice God always gives me if I think to ask: Go do some anonymous things for lonely people, give a few bucks to every poor person you see, return phone calls. Get out of yourself and become a person for others, while simultaneously practicing radical self-care: maybe have a bite to eat, check in with the sky twice, buy some cute socks, take a nap.
— Anne Lamott
One of the immutable laws of being human is that the people who show up are the right people.
— Anne Lamott
Take care of yourselves; take care of one another.
— Anne Lamott
We said that we believed that the truth would set us free, and the truth was that the Sunday-school staff was burned out, that there were almost no people of color, and that if we didn't get more help, we'd have to close down.
— Anne Lamott
In biblical times, they used to stone a few thirteen-year-olds with some regularity, which helped keep the others quiet and at home. The mothers were usually in the first row of stone throwers, and had to be restrained.
— Anne Lamott