Quotes about Thoughts
Nothing binds you except your thoughts; nothing limits you except your fear; and nothing controls you except your beliefs.
- Marianne Williamson
It is our own thoughts that hold the key to miraculous transformation.
- Marianne Williamson
Happiness is the choice I make today. It does not rest on my circumstances, but on my frame of mind. I surrender to God any emotional habits that lead me down the path of unhappiness, and pray for guidance in shifting my thoughts. In cultivating the habits of happiness, I attract the people and situations that match its frequency. I smile more often, give praise more often, give thanks more often, and am glad more often. For such is my choice today.
- Marianne Williamson
Because mind is Cause and the world is Effect, we change the world by changing the thoughts we think about the world.
- Marianne Williamson
Love in your mind produces love in your life. This is the meaning of Heaven. Fear in your mind produces fear in your life. This is the meaning of hell
- Marianne Williamson
whatever it is you choose to think, your subconscious mind takes it very seriously and your experience will reflect your thinking.
- Marianne Williamson
Fear in your mind produces fear in your life. This is the meaning of hell.
- Marianne Williamson
because only love is real. It is our function to see through the illusion of guilt, to the innocence that lies beyond. "To forgive is merely to remember only the loving thoughts you gave in the past, and those that were given you. All
- Marianne Williamson
altar to God is the human mind. To "desecrate the altar" is to fill it with non-loving thoughts.
- Marianne Williamson
Life does not consist mainly, or even largely, of facts or happenings. It consist mainly of the storm of thoughts that is forever flowing through one's head.
- Mark Twain
The energy of the mind is the essence of life.
- Aristotle
I consider that a man's brain originally is like a little empty attic, and you have to stock it with such furniture as you choose. A fool takes in all the lumber of every sort that he comes across, so that the knowledge which might be useful to him gets crowded out, or at best is jumbled up with a lot of other things, so that he has a difficulty in laying his hands upon it.
- Arthur Conan Doyle