Quotes about Emotions
Confrontation makes me nervous.
— Rain Dove
I have no doubt that for some to become a Christian may involve an experience of ecstasy. Yet I do not think such an experience is necessary for someone to be a Christian.
— Stanley Hauerwas
People almost invariably arrive at their beliefs not on the basis of proof but on the basis of what they find attractive. —BLAISE PASCAL
— Norman Geisler
You cannot control what happens to you in life, but you can always control what you will feel and do about what happens to you.
— Viktor E. Frankl
Apathy, the blunting of the emotions and the feeling that one could not care any more, were the symptoms arising during the second stage of the prisoner's psychological reactions, and which eventually made him insensitive to daily and hourly beatings. By means of this insensibility the prisoner soon surrounded himself with a very necessary protective shell.
— Viktor E. Frankl
our current mental-hygiene philosophy stresses the idea that people ought to be happy, that unhappiness is a symptom of maladjustment. Such a value system might be responsible for the fact that the burden of unavoidable unhappiness is increased by unhappiness about being unhappy."4
— Viktor E. Frankl
In actual fact, boredom is now causing, and certainly bringing to psychiatrists, more problems to solve than distress.
— Viktor E. Frankl
We had literally lost the ability to feel pleased and had to relearn it slowly. Psychologically, what was happening to the liberated prisoners could be called "depersonalization." Everything appeared unreal, unlikely, as in a dream.
— Viktor E. Frankl
Melancholy were the sounds on a winter's night.
— Virginia Woolf
who shall measure the heat and violence of a poet's heart when caught and tangled in a woman's body?
— Virginia Woolf
It's not catastrophes, murders, deaths, diseases, that age and kill us; it's the way people look and laugh, and run up the steps of omnibuses.
— Virginia Woolf
They came to her, naturally, since she was a woman, all day long with this and that; one wanting this, another that; the children were growing up; she often felt she was nothing but a sponge sopped full of human emotions.
— Virginia Woolf