Quotes about Resilience
Life is a process where people mix and match, fall apart and come back together.
— Nikki Giovanni
We can walk through the darkest night with the radiant conviction that all things work together for the good.
— Martin Luther King, Jr.
It's all about being in control of myself as an older woman who lives alone, and it's all about how I am going to do what I have to do to be as strong as I can be and be confident that I can do what I need to do as an older person.
— Mary Catherine Bateson
The decent, strong person had to do decent, strong things like love unlovable people and keep peace even when it wasn't easy.
— Mary Connealy
After a while, he went back to his task; he decided that pain was not a valid reason for stopping.
— Ayn Rand
Feeling quiet and empty, he told himself that he would be all right tomorrow. He would forgive himself the weakness of this night, it was like the tears one is permitted at a funeral, and then one learns how to live with an open wound or with a crippled factory.
— Ayn Rand
One doesn't get to be first in anything without the strength to make some sacrifices.
— Ayn Rand
It's roots clutched the hill like a fist with fingers sunk into the soil, and he thought that if a giant were to seize it by the top, he would not be able to uproot it, but would swing the hill and the whole earth with it, like a ball at the end of a string.
— Ayn Rand
The American story has never been about things coming easy. It has been about rising to the moment when the moment is hard. About rejecting panicked division for purposeful unity. About seeing a mountaintop from the deepest valley. That is why we remember that some of the most famous words ever spoken by an American came from a president who took office in a time of turmoil: The only thing we have to fear is fear itself.
— Barack Obama
It [is] that courage that Africa most desperately needs.
— Barack Obama
Have you ever noticed that if there's a hard way and an easy way, you choose the hard way every time? Why do you think that is?
— Barack Obama
It is the kindness to take in a stranger when the levees break; the selflessness of workers who would rather cut their hours than see a friend lose their job which sees us through our darkest hours. It is the firefighter's courage to storm a stairway filled with smoke, but also a parent's willingness to nurture a child, that finally decides our fate.
— Barack Obama