Quotes about Experience
What you haven't done by thirty you're not likely to do. What you have done you'll do lots more.
- John Updike
How many more, I must ask myself, such perfect ends of Augusts will I witness?
- John Updike
And there was, in those Ipswich years, for me at least, a raw educational component; though I used to score well in academic tests, I seemed to know very little of how the world worked and was truly grateful for instruction, whether it was how to stroke a backhand, mix a martini, use a wallpaper steamer, or do the Twist. My wife, too, seemed willing to learn. Old as we must have looked to our children, we were still taking lessons, in how to be grown-up.
- John Updike
The reel of your real life unwound only once.
- John Updike
You were never in Texas," she says.He remembers the house on that strange treeless residential street, the green night growing up from the prairie, the flowers in the window, and says, "Absolutely I was.""Doing what?""Serving Uncle.""Oh, in the Army; well that doesn't count. Everybody's been to Texas with the Army.""You order whatever you think is good," Rabbit tells Tothero.
- John Updike
If you're not making mistakes, then you're not doing anything. I'm positive that a doer makes mistakes.
- John Wooden
Joy makes the longest journey too short.
- John Wooden
What it comes down to, I believe, is that mentoring often involves telling people what they need to hear, rather than what they want to hear. When you are able to be humbly honest with someone about a situation with which you have personal experience—even if you risk angering or hurting that person—you are offering the most valuable gift of all.
- John Wooden
It's what you learn after you know it all that counts. -John Wooden
- John Wooden
The challenge of mindfulness is to be present for your experience as it is rather than immediately jumping in to change it or try to force it to be different.
- Jon Kabat-Zinn
This is the case because, as we noted earlier, it is not the breath that is most important here, but the awareness itself. And the awareness can be of any aspect of your experience, not just your breathing—because it is always the same awareness, whatever the chosen object or objects of attention.
- Jon Kabat-Zinn
L]ive life as if each moment was important, as if each moment counted and could be worked with, even if it was a moment of pain, sadness, despair, or fear. This work involves above all the regular, disciplined practice of moment-to-moment awareness or mindfulness, the complete owning of each moment of your experience, good, bad, or ugly. This is the essence of full catastrophe living.
- Jon Kabat-Zinn