Quotes about Frustration
We totally misunderstand what it means to be alive when we think of our lives as time we can use in search of rewards and pleasure. Frantically and in growing frustration, we search through our days, our years, looking for the reward, for the success that will make our lives worthwhile, like the security guard looking through the trash in the wheelbarrow for something of value and all the while missing the obvious answer. When you have learned how to live, life itself is the reward.
- Harold S. Kushner
What might have been" is a pretty good definition of Hell.
- Harold S. Kushner
There were periods when I was first-choice keeper and was starting to consolidate my position when out of the blue I got injured. It happened a few times and it really unsettled me.
- Lukasz Fabianski
If you're waiting with God, waiting is okay. If you're always waiting on God, you'll be frustrated. God never seems to work at the speed that we want Him to.
- Louie Giglio
The thing about Steven Seagal is that he clearly wants to be a great person, but he just doesn't know how.
- El-P
Becoming a musician is a strange thing. It's not all cupcakes and ice cream. You're trying to master an instrument, and you sometimes can't tell if you're getting better. You love it, but you also hate it.
- Kamasi Washington
Without a biblical model to explain the place relationships should have in your life, you will likely experience imbalance, confusion, conflicting desires, and general frustration.
- Timothy Lane
Blowing up at people when our agendas are trampled
- Timothy Lane
Citizens United opened a door that's frustrated anyone who's looking.
- Ted Deutch
I'm really very sorry, but it is not my fault. People are so annoying. All my pianists look exactly like poets, and all my poets look exactly like pianists
- Oscar Wilde
Our fatigue is often caused not by work, but by worry, frustration and resentment." —Dale Carnegie
- Dale Carnegie
Egotism is pathological self-obsession, a reaction to anxiety about whether one really does count. It is a form of acute selfconsciousness and can be prevented and healed only by the experience of being adequately loved. It is, indeed, a desperate response to frustration of the need we all have to count for something and be held to be irreplaceable, without price.
- Dallas Willard