Quotes about Emotional
Author has developed a routine of daily emotional debriefing with his kids as he tucks them in at night. To encourage the habit of keeping uncluttered, open heart, he starts with basic questions asking whether anyone has hurt them or made them angry to help them process at an age-appropriate depth. As they mature, he will add questions.
— Andy Stanley
The people closest to you routinely catch the flak thrown off by the explosive stuff you normally work so hard to keep hidden.
— Andy Stanley
Before I draw people's attention to a solution, I want to make sure they are emotionally engaged with the problem. If the text answers a question, I dare not go there until everyone in the audience really wants to know the answer.
— Andy Stanley
Careful is cerebral; fearful is emotional. Careful is fueled by information; fearful is fueled by imagination. Careful calculates risk; fearful avoids risk. Careful wants to achieve success; fearful wants to avoid failure. Careful is concerned about progress; fearful is concerned about protection.
— Andy Stanley
Maintain your physical, emotional, and spiritual harmony with the universe by meditating every day. Inhale the precious breath of life. It is your connection to your Higher power.
— Louise Hay
Those who are quick to feel disrespected often have a spiritual vacuum in their lives, because they feel disconnected to the love of their Father in Heaven.
— Al Gore
We know from daily life that we exist for other people first of all, for whose smiles and well-being our own happiness depends.
— Albert Einstein
Faithfulness is to the emotional life what consistency is to the life of the intellect - simply a confession of failures.
— Oscar Wilde
Sometimes doing the right thing wounds others — and also wounds the wounder.
— Anne Graham Lotz
Wounded people may not get over their wounds easily or quickly. Wounds can be hard just to brush aside because the wounder says, "I'm sorry.
— Anne Graham Lotz
Jesus' example teaches a powerful lesson. He demonstrates that one way to overcome emotional pain is to focus on the needs of others — to reach out and help someone else who may also be suffering.
— Anne Graham Lotz
Would the contagious cycle of pain in your life, or that of your family or church, be stopped if you would be the first to reach out, to give in, to say you are sorry, or at the very least open up a conversation on the source of the wounds?
— Anne Graham Lotz