Quotes about Fulfillment
When you get your "Who am I?" question right, all the "What should I do?" questions tend to take care of themselves.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
The first half of life is discovering the script, and the second half is actually writing it and owning it.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
The reason we do anything one more time is because the last time did not really satisfy us deeply. As English poet W.H. Auden put it in "Apropos of Many Things": "We would rather be ruined than changed. We would rather die in our dread than climb the cross of the present and let our illusions die.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
Thomas Merton, the American monk, pointed out that we may spend our whole life climbing the ladder of success, only to find when we get to the top that our ladder is leaning against the wrong wall. Most
- Fr. Richard Rohr
A heaven you created by yourself will never be heaven for long.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
Only later in life can we perhaps join with Thomas Merton, who penned one of my favorite lines, "If I had a message to my contemporaries it is surely this: Be anything you like, be madmen, drunks, and bastards of every shape and form, but at all costs avoid one thing: success If you are too obsessed with success, you will forget to live. If you have learned only how to be a success, your life has probably been wasted."7
- Fr. Richard Rohr
In the second half of life, we are not demanding our American constitutional right to the pursuit of happiness or that people must have our same experiences; rather, simple meaning now suffices, and that becomes in itself a much deeper happiness. As the body cannot live without food, so the soul cannot live without meaning.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
Everything finally belongs, and you are a part of it. This knowing and this enjoying are a good description of salvation.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
We do not want to embark on a further journey if it feels like going down, especially after we have put so much sound and fury into going up. This is surely the first and primary reason why many people never get to the fullness of their own lives. The supposed achievements of the first half of life have to fall apart and show themselves to be wanting in some way, or we will not move further. Why would we?
- Fr. Richard Rohr
From eighteen to fifty-five was the unfolding. Then, when it happened at fifty-five, they knew what they were born for. When that moment comes, it is great and it is all synchronicity. We know then that grace is at work and we are not manufacturing our own lives.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
What is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?
- Fr. Richard Rohr
It is strange that when people have so much, they are so anxious about not having enough—to do, to see, to own, to fix, to control, to change.
- Fr. Richard Rohr