Quotes about Survival
There is nothing boring about the prospect of extinction.
— Barbara Kingsolver
For some, a lousy day's work will get you yelled at. For farmers, it's live or die.
— Barbara Kingsolver
The tree was intact, not cut or broken by wind. What a waste. After maybe centuries of survival it had simply let go of the ground, the wide fist of its root mass ripped up and resting naked above a clay gash in the wooded mountainside. Like herself, it just seemed to have come loose from its station in life.
— Barbara Kingsolver
I wanted to go home. Which was nowhere, but it's a feeling you keep having, even after that's no place anymore. Probably if they dropped a bomb and there wasn't any food left on the planet, you'd still keep feeling hungry too.
— Barbara Kingsolver
Satisfied needs do not motivate. It's only the unsatisfied need that motivates. Next to physical survival, the greatest need of a human being is psychological survival—to be understood, to be affirmed, to be validated, to be appreciated.
— Stephen Covey
The single most significant factor, he realized, was a sense of future vision—the impelling conviction of those who were to survive that they had a mission to perform, some important work left to do.1 Survivors of POW camps in Vietnam and elsewhere have reported similar experiences: a compelling, future-oriented vision is the primary force that kept many of them alive.
— Stephen Covey
Love is a very ancient force, which served its purpose in its day but no longer is essential for the survival of the species.
— Frank Herbert
That I survived the Holocaust and went on to love beautiful girls, to talk, to write, to have toast and tea and live my life - that is what is abnormal.
— Elie Wiesel
Life-the way it really is-is a battle not between Bad and Good but between Bad and Worse.
— Joseph Brodsky
The world breaks everyone and afterward many are strong at the broken places. But those that will not break it kills. It kills the very good and the very gentle and the very brave impartially. If you are none of these you can be sure that it will kill you too but there will be no special hurry.
— Ernest Hemingway
Good poetry survives not when it is pretty or beautiful or nice but when it is true: accurate and honest.
— Eugene Peterson
Of all evils, indeed, famine is the worst, and it destroys nothing so effectively as shame. For that which under other circumstances is worthy of respect, in the midst of famine is despised. Thus women snatched the food from the very mouths of their husbands and children, from their fathers, and what was most pitiable of all, mothers from their babes. And while their dearest ones were wasting away in their arms, they were not ashamed to take away from them the last drops that supported life.
— Eusebius of Caesarea