What We Wish Were True Quotes

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What We Wish Were True: Reflections on Nurturing Life and Facing Death What We Wish Were True: Reflections on Nurturing Life and Facing Death by Tallu Schuyler Quinn
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What We Wish Were True Quotes Showing 1-7 of 7
“Janet encouraged me to let in the problems of the world enough not to paralyze me but to galvanize me to do more. As I made my way through the ensuing years, I would think about these two words so often--paralyze and galvanize--their strong and opposing forces, and the space between them.”
Tallu Schuyler Quinn, What We Wish Were True: Reflections on Nurturing Life and Facing Death
“Janet encouraged me to let in the problems of the world enough not to paralyze me but to galvanize me to do more”
Tallu Schuyler Quinn, What We Wish Were True: Reflections on Nurturing Life and Facing Death
“Normal day, let me be aware of the treasure you are. Let me learn from you, love you, bless you before you depart. Let me not pass you by in quest of some rare and perfect tomorrow. Let me hold you while I may, for it may not always be so. One day I shall dig my nails into the earth, or bury my face in the pillow, or stretch myself taut, or raise my hands to the sky and want, more than all the world, your return.[1]”
Tallu Schuyler Quinn, What We Wish Were True: Reflections on Nurturing Life and Facing Death
“Janet encouraged me to let in the problems of the world enough not to paralyze me but to galvanize me to do more. As I made my way through the ensuing years, I would think about these two words so often--paralyze and galvanize--their strong and opposing forces, and the space between them.”
Tallu Schuyler Quinn, What We Wish Were True: Reflections on Nurturing Life and Facing Death
“Janet encouraged me to let in the problems of the world enough not to paralyze me but to galvanize me to do more. As I made my way through the ensuing years, I would think about these two words so often--paralyze and galvanize--their strong and opposing forces, and the space between them”
Tallu Schuyler Quinn, What We Wish Were True: Reflections on Nurturing Life and Facing Death
“Janet encouraged me to let in the problems of the world enough not to paralyze me but to galvanize me to do more. As I made my way through the ensuing years, I would think about these two words so often--paralyze andgalvanize--their strong and opposing forces, and the space between them.”
Tallu Schuyler Quinn, What We Wish Were True: Reflections on Nurturing Life and Facing Death
“Janet encouraged me to let in the problems of the world enough not to paralyze me but to galvanize me to do more. As I made my way through the ensuing years, I would think about these two words so often--paralyze and galvanize--their strong and opposing forces, and the space between them.”
Tallu Schuyler Quinn, What We Wish Were True: Reflections on Nurturing Life and Facing Death