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Quotes about Self-discovery

When you get your "Who am I?" question right, all the "What should I do?" questions tend to take care of themselves. The very fact that so many religious people have to so vigorously prove and defend their salvation theories makes one seriously doubt whether they have experienced divine mirroring at any great depth.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
You do not climb up to your True Self. You fall into it, so don't avoid all falling
- Fr. Richard Rohr
Am I willing to walk into the wilds of my interior life without knowing what I'll find?
- Fr. Richard Rohr
We do not want to embark on a further journey if it feels like going down, especially after we have put so much sound and fury into going up. This is surely the first and primary reason why many people never get to the fullness of their own lives. The supposed achievements of the first half of life have to fall apart and show themselves to be wanting in some way, or we will not move further. Why would we?
- Fr. Richard Rohr
The True Self always has something good to say. The False Self babbles on, largely about itself.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
Your True Self is that part of you that knows who you are and whose you are, although largely unconsciously.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
In this high place it is as simple as this, Leave everything you know behind. Step toward the cold surface, say the old prayer of rough love and open both arms. Those who come with empty hands will stare into the lake astonished, there, in the cold light reflecting pure snow, the true shape of your own face. David Whyte, "Tilicho Lake"   Conservatives
- Fr. Richard Rohr
We need to encounter the hero within and let him lead us on the adventure of our lives.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
People who know who they are find it the easiest to know who they aren't.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
The self-same moment that we find God in ourselves, we also find ourselves inside God
- Fr. Richard Rohr
The end is already planted in us at the beginning, and it gnaws away at us until we get there freely and consciously.
- Fr. Richard Rohr
This needed work is indeed "spiritual warfare," as the desert monks called it, since it takes conscious and sustained struggle to be aware of the shadow self—which only takes ever more subtle disguises the "holier" you get.
- Fr. Richard Rohr