2,179 Quotes About Letting-go
- Author Roy T. Bennett
-
Quote
Let go of something old that no longer serves you in order to make room for something new.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Shannon L. Alder
-
Quote
The secret to life is to have no fear. When you can let go of what others think about you, how something is going to turn out, or how your past will affect your future, then you are finally living life free.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Steve Maraboli
-
Quote
A grateful mindset can set you free from the prison of disempowerment and the shackles of misery.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Rebecca Solnit
-
Quote
The art is not one of forgetting but letting go. And when everything else is gone, you can be rich in loss.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Steve Maraboli
-
Quote
Love is forgiving, accepting, moving on, embracing, and all encompassing. And if you’re not doing that for yourself, you cannot do that with anyone else.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Steve Maraboli
-
Quote
The greatest step towards a life of simplicity is to learn to let go.
- Tags
- Share
- Author David Rynick
-
Quote
This place of stuck—“I have to” and “I can’t”—feels familiar from my spiritual work. We’re told to simply “let go”—but when we try to do this, we often seem to get more deeply tangled in the willful web of resistance. In spite of injunctions to the contrary, “letting go” doesn’t appear to be something we have conscious control over. Why can’t we just let go into the loving arms of the universe? What is this holding back that seems so essential—so imperative?
- Tags
- Share
- Author David Rynick
-
Quote
Release seems to come only when we allow ourselves to be truly stuck—when we find ourselves all out of tricks and skillful means. As we allow ourselves to surrender to the prosaic and the holy in the particular form of this moment, we open ourselves to the grace of letting things be—the grace that functions effortlessly and is, indeed, the very fabric of our life.
- Tags
- Share
- Author Joan Tollifson
-
Quote
Habit has two parts, Toni [Packer] says. There is the habit itself (finger biting, smoking, drinking, whatever), and there is the observer who wants to stop, who is also a habit. And there is the conflict, the battle between the desire to indulge, which is an escape from what is, and the desire to stop, which is also a movement away from what is.
- Tags
- Share