Quotes about Sensitivity
when someone of great significance in our lives makes us feel like our belonging is more of a question mark than a security blanket, we become very sensitive to even the slightest hints of rejection.
- Lysa TerKeurst
Be sensitive to the plight of others. You have to know about the tragedies as well as the triumphs, the failures as well as the success.
- Jim Rohn
...that freshness of feeling, that delicate honor which shrinks from wounding even a sentiment...
- George Eliot
Few things give rise to imprecise rhetoric like the issue of race. It's understandable, but damaging.
- John Piper
It seems disrespectful to me to see ladies in church in very short skirts or skimpy, sleeveless tops. I would imagine that it could be distracting to men who are trying to keep their minds on God.
- Elisabeth Elliot
We have lost the invaluable faculty of being shocked a faculty which has hitherto almost distinguished the Man or Woman from the beast or child.
- CS Lewis
There are some men formed with feelings so blunt that they can hardly be said to be awake during the whole course of their lives.
- Edmund Burke
Her only gift was knowing people almost by instinct, she thought, walking on. If you put her in a room with someone, up went her back like a cat's; or she purred.
- Virginia Woolf
I was fighting with Thoby on the lawn. We were pommelling each other with our fists. Just as I raised my fist to hit him, I felt: why hurt another person? I dropped my hand instantly, and stood there, and let him beat me. I remember the feeling. It was a feeling of hopeless sadness. It was as if I became aware of something terrible; and of my own powerlessness. I slunk off alone, feeling horribly depressed.
- Virginia Woolf
I verily believe that her not remembering and not minding in the least, made me cry again, inwardly - and that is the sharpest crying of all
- Charles Dickens
It's all very true! It's a weakness to be so affectionate, but I can't help it.
- Charles Dickens
Through all my punishments, disgraces, fasts, and vigils, and other penitential performances, I had nursed this assurance; and to my communing so much with it, in a solitary and unprotected way, I in great part refer the fact that I was morally timid and very sensitive.
- Charles Dickens