Saturday, July 12, 2008

confusion quotes

Alan Bennett: 

Life is rather like a tin of sardines - we're all of us looking for the key.

Barry Lopez: 

How is one to live a moral and compassionate existence when one is fully aware of the blood, the horror inherent in life, when one finds darkness not only in one's culture but within oneself? If there is a stage at which an individual life becomes truly adult, it must be when one grasps the irony in its unfolding and accepts responsibility for a life lived in the midst of such paradox. One must live in the middle of contradiction, because if all contradiction were eliminated at once life would collapse. There are simply no answers to some of the great pressing questions. You continue to live them out, making your life a worthy expression of leaning into the light.
Arctic Dreams


Blaise Pascal: 

You always admire what you really don't understand.

Chinese proverb: 

One who asks a question is a fool for five minutes; one who does not ask a question remains a fool forever.

Gilda Radner: 

I wanted a perfect ending. Now I've learned, the hard way, that some poems don't rhyme, and some stories don't have a clear beginning, middle, and end. Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it, without knowing what's going to happen next. Delicious Ambiguity.

Henri Nouwen: 

When we honestly ask ourselves which person in our lives means the most us, we often find that it is those who, instead of giving much advice, solutions, or cures, have chosen rather to share our pain and touch our wounds with a gentle and tender hand. The friend who can be silent with us in a moment of despair or confusion, who can stay with us in an hour of grief and bereavement, who can tolerate not knowing, not curing, not healing and face with us the reality of our powerlessness, that is a friend who cares.

Jane Haddam: 

People always seemed to know half of history, and to get it confused with the other half.

Lewis Carroll: 

Everything's got a moral, if only you can find it.

M. Scott Peck: 

The truth is that our finest moments are most likely to occur when we are feeling deeply uncomfortable, unhappy, or unfulfilled. For it is only in such moments, propelled by our discomfort, that we are likely to step out of our ruts and start searching for different ways or truer answers.

Marshall McLuhan: 

Our Age of Anxiety is, in great part, the result of trying to do today's jobs with yesterday's tools.

Molly Ivins: 

The thing about democracy, beloveds, is that it is not neat, orderly, or quiet. It requires a certain relish for confusion.

Rainer Maria Rilke: 

Have patience with everything that remains unsolved in your heart. Try to love the questions themselves, like locked rooms and like books written in a foreign language. Do not now look for the answers. They cannot now be given to you because you could not live them. It is a question of experiencing everything. At present you need to live the question. Perhaps you will gradually, without even noticing it, find yourself experiencing the answer, some distant day. 
Letters to a Young Poet


Ralph Waldo Emerson: 

People wish to be settled: only as far as they are unsettled is there any hope for them.

Ralph Waldo Emerson: 

Everything in the universe goes by indirection. There are no straight lines.

Rumi: 

Let the lover be disgraceful, crazy, absent-minded. 
Someone sober will worry about events going badly.
Let the lover be.

Salvador Dali: 

I believe that the moment is near when by a procedure of active paranoiac thought, it will be possible to systematize confusion and contribute to the total discrediting of the world of reality.

Thomas A. Edison: 

Restlessness and discontent are the first necessities of progress.

Tom Peters: 

If you're not confused, you're not paying attention.

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