La Vie, According to Rose Quotes
La Vie, According to Rose
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Lauren Parvizi4,694 ratings, 4.00 average rating, 355 reviews
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La Vie, According to Rose Quotes
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“All these years haven’t been wasted; they were just your inner fermentation process at work.”
― La Vie, According to Rose
― La Vie, According to Rose
“what you do is who you are.”
― La Vie, According to Rose
― La Vie, According to Rose
“Give yourself permission to play, explore, make mistakes. Try everything that comes your way. Nothing coming your way? Put yourself in the way.”
― La Vie, According to Rose
― La Vie, According to Rose
“go—as slowly as you have to, but go.”
― La Vie, According to Rose
― La Vie, According to Rose
“Dad had refused to teach us Farsi: he was becoming a real American, he had real American daughters, and real Americans spoke English. It”
― La Vie, According to Rose
― La Vie, According to Rose
“Same sense of anticipation pinned down with disappointment because everyone was experiencing the same brand of magic as you, and what’s so magical about that?”
― La Vie, According to Rose
― La Vie, According to Rose
“embrace the body language you want. If you are sad, smile. Scared? Open yourself up. The real emotions often follow, and the world responds in kind.”
― La Vie, According to Rose
― La Vie, According to Rose
“We like to believe when something is over, it’s behind us. Finished. Done. A neat package we can tuck into our closet or toss with the trash. But everything we do, everyone we love, stays with us in one form or another. Feelings fade, yes, while experience changes us. And thank goodness. Experience is how we learn. It’s how we love better the next time. I’ve seen hundreds of clients amid a so-called breakup or divorce. Many mourn the end of a relationship years after the fact. Grief, pain, or general discomfort following the loss of love—even if you initiated its end—is inevitable. I’ve found if we can reframe this end point into something else, a gain, a path forward, we lessen our struggle. When we stop resisting, grief and pain become momentum propelling you into the next phase of your life. They signify not a closed door but a long hallway with many paths. When I ask my clients to swap the defeatist terminology of “breaking up” or “divorce” for “working through the end of our relationship,” at first, they almost always resist. “It’s so awkward,” they tell me. “Forced.” To which I reply, “Yes, and we know change is uncomfortable. Stay with it and see what comes. It’s an experiment, nothing more.” Soon, they might begin to talk of their “breakup,” catch themselves, and start again using new words. Instead of saying, “It’s so hard. I’m so miserable,” they say, “It hurts, but we’re continuing to work through it.” Aha! Now we can begin to focus not on the loss but what is gained. 48”
― La Vie, According to Rose
― La Vie, According to Rose
