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    “There is no stillness to the mind that thinks of nothing but itself, nor will there ever be peace for the body and spirit that follow their every urge and value nothing but themselves.”

    Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 137)

      “We were not put on this planet to be worker bees, compelled to perform some function over and over again for the cause of the hive until we die. Nor do we ‘owe it’ to anyone to keep doing, doing, doing—not our fans, not our followers, not our parents who have provided so much for us, not even our families. Killing ourselves does nothing for anybody. It’s perfectly possible to do and make good work from a good place. You can be healthy and still and successful.”

      Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 125)

        More does nothing for the one who feels less than, who cannot see the wealth that was given to them at birth, that they have accumulated in their relationships and experiences. Solving your problem of poverty is an achievable goal and can be fixed by earning and saving money. No one could seriously claim otherwise. The issue is when we think these activities can address spiritual poverty.

        Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 124)

          “I think I understand now that the restlessness we feel as we make our plans and chase our ambitions is not the effect of their importance to our happiness and our eagerness to attain them. We are restless because deep in our hearts we know now that our happiness is found elsewhere, and our work, no matter how valuable it is to us or to others, cannot take its place. But we hurry on anyway, and attend to our business because we need to matter, and we don’t always realize we already do.”

          Marco Rubio, via Stillness is the Key (Page 123)

            “To have an impulse and to resist it, to sit with it and examine it, to let it pass by like a bad smell—this is how we develop spiritual strength. This is how we become who we want to be in this world. Only those of us who take the time to explore, to question, to extrapolate the consequences of our desires have an opportunity to overcome them and to stop regrets before they start.”

            Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 118)

              “Whatever you’re feeling, be good to yourself. If you feel lost, be patient with yourself while you find your way. If you feel scared, be gentle with yourself while you find the strength to face your fear. If you feel hurt, be kind to yourself while you grieve and slowly heal. You can’t bully yourself into clarity, courage, or peace, and you can’t rush self-discovery or transformation. Some things simply take time, so take the pressure off and give yourself space to grow.”

              Lori Deschene

                “Tension is who you think you should be. Relaxation is who you are.”

                Chinese proverb

                  “To be self-compassionate is not to be self-indulgent or self-centered. A major component of self-compassion is to be kind to yourself. Treat yourself with love, care, dignity and make your wellbeing a priority. With self-compassion, we still hold ourselves accountable professionally and personally, but there are no toxic emotions inflicted upon and towards ourselves.”

                  Christopher Dines

                    “When we create rituals around powerful tools for performance and awareness, such as the morning and evening rituals, or when we train the fundamentals common to our missions or critical nodes, then we are grooving peak performance behavior into our subconscious.  These are good routines that will help unlock creativity and success.”

                    Mark Divine, The Way of the Seal

                      “None of us are perfect. We have biologies and pathologies that will inevitably trip us up. What we need then is a philosophy and a strong moral code—that sense of virtue—to help us resist what we can, and to give us the strength to pick ourselves back up when we fail and try to do and be better.”

                      Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 117)

                        “Lust is a destroyer of peace in our lives: Lust for a beautiful person. Lust for an orgasm. Lust for someone other than the one we’ve committed to be with. Lust for power. Lust for dominance. Lust for other people’s stuff. Lust for the fanciest, best, most expensive things that money can buy. And is this not at odds with the self-mastery we say we want? A person enslaved to their urges is not free—whether they are a plumber or the president.”

                        Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 114)

                          “No one has less serenity than the person who does not know what is right or wrong. No one is more exhausted than the person who, because they lack a moral code, must belabor every decision and consider every temptation. No one feels worse about themselves than the cheater or the liar, even if—often especially if—they are showered with rewards for their cheating and lying. Life is meaningless to the person who decides their choices have no meaning.”

                          Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 99)

                            “Mental stillness will be short-lived if our hearts are on fire, or our souls ache with emptiness. We are incapable of seeing what is essential in the world if we are blind to what’s going on within us. We cannot be in harmony with anyone or anything if the need for more, more , more is gnawing at our insides like a maggot.”

                            Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 94)

                              “Most of us would be seized with fear if our bodies went numb, and would do everything possible to avoid it, yet we take no interest at all in the numbing of our souls.”

                              Epictetus, via Stillness is the Key (Page 83)

                                “Most students, whether it’s in archery or yoga or chemistry, go into a subject with a strong intention.  They are outcome-focused.  They want to get the best grade or the highest score.  They bring their previous ‘expertise’ with them.  They want to skip the unnecessary steps and get right to the sexy stuff.  As a result, they are difficult to teach and easily discouraged when the journey proves harder than expected.  They are not present.  They are not open to experience and cannot learn.” ~ Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 78)

                                  “There are going to be setbacks in life.  Even a master or a genius will experience a period of inadequacy when they attempt to learn new skills or explore new domains.  Confidence is what determines whether this will be a source of anguish or an enjoyable challenge.  If you’re miserable every time things are not going your way, if you cannot enjoy it when things are going your way because you undermine it with doubts and insecurity, life will be hell.” ~ Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 73)

                                    “Confident people know what matters.  They know when to ignore other people’s opinions.  They don’t boast or lie to get ahead (and then struggle to deliver).  Confidence is the freedom to set your own standards and unshackle yourself from the need to prove yourself.  A confident person doesn’t fear disagreement and doesn’t see change—swapping an incorrect opinion for a correct one—as an admission of inferiority.” ~ Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 72)

                                      “Find people you admire and ask how they got where they are.  Seek book recommendations.  Add experience and experimentation on top of this.  Put yourself in tough situations.  Accept challenges.  Familiarize yourself with the unfamiliar.  That’s how you widen your perspective and your understanding.  The wise are still because they have seen it all.  They know what to expect because they’ve been through so much.  They’ve made mistakes and learned from them.  And so must you.”

                                      Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 66)

                                        “[On reading] I cannot understand how some people can live without communicating with the wisest people who ever lived on earth.”

                                        Leo Tolstoy, via Stillness is the Key (Page 65)

                                          “We can’t be afraid of silence, as it has much to teach us.  Seek it.  The ticking of the hands of your watch is telling you how time is passing away, never to return.  Listen to it.” ~ Ryan Holiday, Stillness is the Key (Page 62)