You Will Find Your People Quotes
You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
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Lane Moore2,681 ratings, 3.26 average rating, 458 reviews
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You Will Find Your People Quotes
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“Because sometimes people come into our lives just to show us what we don’t want, and those people have given us the gift of being a mirror. And that mirror shows us who we really are and all that we’ve buried, all the needs we’ve pushed underground because they seemed unsightly. And if we’re lucky, another friend comes into the picture soon after, to confirm that the needs we’ve buried can be met, can rise from the earth like buds, to be watered, and nurtured by the people around us, until we see that our needs were not burdens, not unsightly flaws to be worked on, but instead, vital parts of us that deserve to bloom.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“you’re allowed to want a friendship to be able to give you everything you need, even if they don’t understand those needs because their needs are different. You’re allowed to hold out for someone who can meet you where you’re at.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“You don’t want too many things. You want what you damn well want, which everyone is allowed. There is so much rhetoric I see, saying that you shouldn’t “expect you from other people.” That people are limited, and they can’t be expected to give you as much as you give them. But it is so important to remember that you are very much allowed to require you from other people if that’s what you need. If you give a lot emotionally, you are absolutely allowed to hold out for someone who can give the same amount of emotional resonance, the same amount of compassion, when they are able. And if someone sees those needs and knows they can’t provide them, that’s OK, too, but you’re allowed to have them just the same.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“And not because surviving trauma makes you better or worse, but because trauma can make you feel like you’re weird, unlike anyone else, and no one could possibly relate to you or see you and give you what you need.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“the kinds of connections that are just close enough to what you want, while also being exactly what you currently need.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“That time in my life was so full of horrible people and just the worst luck, it was nearly impossible for me to trust anyone. I kept worrying, What if I’m making the wrong decisions again? But sometimes life allows you to form”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“We spend so much time in our childhoods learning about practicing fairness, but the world itself is not fair, as much as we’d like it to be. We’re not all walking the same path, with the same resources and the exact same timing. Ideally, we’d all get the support systems we were promised, but then some of us don’t, and no one taught us how to fill in those cracks. No one teaches us how to find power in vulnerability, how to build intimacy, how to grow as a person, or how to grieve when you’ve outgrown the people you once loved. Or when they outgrow you.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“The whole point here is you have to do what’s right for you. Just as they are doing what is right for them. Everyone’s allowed to change and grow, absolutely. In the same vein, you’re allowed to say, or simply feel, “What you can give me is less than what I need from you right now, so let’s change how we interact, and here’s how I need to do that in a way that feels right to me.” Being a good friend doesn’t mean simply going along for the ride while the other person guides the friendship wherever they want to take it. You are allowed to say that you’d like this person to be X type of friend, and if they see it differently, they are allowed to say so as well. And then it is absolutely within your rights, and theirs, to either be OK with that difference or to part ways, no harm, no foul. The most important thing to remember is that you were not made to endure your friendships. You were made to enjoy them. Adjust the levels as necessary.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“So often it can seem like life would be so much easier if people didn’t need each other, or if everyone could just ask for what they need in a way we can hear, or if everyone could just intuit what we need so we don’t have to say it. It’s so easy to think people are islands, and anyone who gets stranded on another island did something wrong, or they should reach out to the other support systems they may or may not have, because we “shouldn’t have to” take care of them. And that is all the more reason we should choose the friendships we cultivate carefully, so that if someone we’ve chosen, someone we love, is more isolated than we knew and doesn’t have anyone but us, we will see this as a gift, an opportunity to be the person who finally shows up. To see their SOS and finally answer the call, ideally, before they even have to make it.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“Empathy is the currency of people who’ve been there, and wish things had gone differently. And yet many times, there are people who’ve been to hell and back and have somehow returned with very little empathy for others who struggle in that way or, in Seth’s case, they have actively developed it because they cared enough to do so.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“We talk so openly, so freely, about body shame, as we rightly should, but we don’t talk about the shame that comes from constantly seeing other people having loving, consistent, reliable friendships as though everyone has that and if you don’t, that’s super weird, what’s wrong with you? That relational shame. What does it say about you that you couldn’t easily find four to five people who all understand you constantly, make you feel seen, anticipate every possible need, and try at all costs to protect you from experiencing pain? And if someone caused you to feel pain, why didn’t they swoop in and hold you while you cried for days, which is always what happens to everyone of course. Why couldn’t you find that, so easily, at the local corner store, like everyone else on earth did, you genuine freak?”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“You deserve people who check all your boxes, just as much as you check all of theirs.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“It's so easy to become obsessed with how other people are being hurtful that sometimes we don't think about how we can be better to our friends as well.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“But the trouble is, this is one part of life we can’t simply fix by going out and choosing to, because finding friends—real, true friends—takes extreme luck and privilege, it just does. And I use the word privilege because it’s something a lot of people just aren’t lucky enough to come by, but we talk about it like everyone gets this. And the truth is, you’re more likely to get it if you had a great childhood and loving parents. And separating it from those facts and putting it squarely on the shoulders of worthiness, renders it an indictment of your character.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“In a new friendship it can be so important to know what someone else has experienced before you assume that your experience is monolithic”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
“At some point in my interactions with new age hippies who may or may not be toxic (the good ones are so good, but the bad ones are a nightmare in yoga pants), a nightmare-in-yoga-pants person told me that we choose everything that will happen to us, before we are born, as part of our reincarnation journey. If you just said, “Wait, what?” so did I when I heard it. There’s this idea that we chose all our traumas, heartache, and struggles, because this was our best path to enlightenment in this life. This is an idea I find to be deeply flawed in so many ways, since it’s far too easy to hear this and slide into a pit called “I deserved [insert painful traumas],” that is never, ever true.”
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
― You Will Find Your People: How to Make Meaningful Friendships as an Adult
