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Quotes about Emotions

It is not always events that have touched us personally that affect us the most.
- Elie Wiesel
Love that makes everything complicated. While hate simplifies everything. Hatred puts accents on things and beings, and on what separates them. Love erases accents.
- Elie Wiesel
It's a laugh that comes from beyond happiness and sadness. From beyond faith and anger. It's a laugh that only the dead can appreciate.
- Elie Wiesel
Every tragedy is unique, just as every human is unique. When a person loses someone dear to her, who am I to say that my tragedy was greater? I have no right. For that person, her tragedy is the greatest in the world—and she is right in thinking so.
- Elie Wiesel
Waiting silently is the hardest thing of all. I was dying to talk to Jim and about Jim. But the things that we feel most deeply we ought to learn to be silent about, at least until we have talked them over thoroughly with God.
- Elisabeth Elliot
Women still dream and hope, pin their emotions on some man who doesn't reciprocate, and end up in confusion.
- Elisabeth Elliot
Of all things difficult to rule, none were more so than my will and affections.
- Elisabeth Elliot
If she had been born a hundred years later, she would very likely have been encouraged to be angry, told she had a right to express her anger and her sorrow and her bewilderment and her rage, and generally to disintegrate. These were not the expectations of her friends and family. Nothing could have been further from her expectations of herself. Instead, she threw herself into serving others.
- Elisabeth Elliot
I wonder if she allowed the man to see her eagerness and scared him? Possibly her failure to wait quietly caused him to curtail the friendship.
- Elisabeth Elliot
We cannot look at the sun all the time, we cannot face death all the time.
- Elisabeth Kubler-Ross
so many ways, loss shows us what is precious, while love teaches us who
- Elisabeth Kubler-Ross
Most people's initial reaction to sad people is to try to cheer them up, to tell them not to look at things so grimly, to look at the bright side of life. This cheering-up reaction is often an expression of that person's own needs and that person's own inability to tolerate a long face over an extended period. A mourner should be allowed to experience his sorrow, and he will be grateful for those who can sit with him without telling him not to be sad.
- Elisabeth Kubler-Ross