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    “Believe those who search for the truth; doubt those who have found it.”

    André Gide, via Think Like A Monk (Page 196)

      “When you ask for feedback, choose your advisors wisely. We commonly make one of two mistakes when we seek feedback: We either ask everyone for advice about one problem or we ask one person for advice about all of our problems. If you ask too broadly, you’ll get fifty-seven different options and will be overwhelmed, confused, and lost. On the other hand, if you drop all your dilemmas on one person, then they’ll be overwhelmed, unequipped, and at some point tired of carrying your baggage.”

      Jay Shetty, via Think Like A Monk (Page 192)

        “Imagine you are at the end of your life and you are granted the ability to repeat one day. Which period of your life do you choose to repeat? Which phase of life would you want to go back to? Does that tell you anything about how you should be spending your time today?”

        James Clear

          “Humility comes from accepting where you are without seeing it as a reflection of who you are. Then you can use your imagination to find success.”

          Jay Shetty, via Think Like A Monk (Page 188)

            “What belongs to you today, belonged to someone yesterday and will be someone else’s tomorrow.”

            Unknown, via Think Like A Monk (Page 185)

              “We only notice salt when there is too much of it in our food, or not enough. Nobody ever says, ‘Wow, this meal has the perfect amount of salt.’ When salt is used in the best way possible, it goes unrecognized. Salt is so humble that when something goes wrong, it takes the blame, and when everything goes right, it doesn’t take credit.”

              Radhanath Swami, via Think Like A Monk (Page 185)

                “At the ashram, the most straightforward path to humility was through simple work, menial tasks that didn’t place any participant at the center of attention. We washed huge pots with hoses, pulled weeds in the vegetable garden, and washed down the squat toilets—the worst! The point wasn’t just to complete the work that needed to be done. It was to keep us from getting big-headed. Some tasks build competence, and some build character.”

                Jay Shetty, via Think Like A Monk (Page 178)