Anxiety Quotes
These are some of the best 'Anxiety' quotations and sayings.
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Anxiety and conscience are a powerful pair of dynamos. Between them, they have ensured that I shall work hard, but they cannot ensure that one shall work at anything worthwhile.
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Anxiety does not empty tomorrow of its sorrows, but only empties today of its strength.
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Anxiety is a word of unbelief or unreasoning dread. - We have no right to allow it. Full faith in God puts it to rest.
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Anxiety is essential to the human condition. The confrontation with anxiety can relieve us from boredom, sharpen the sensitivity and assure the presence of tension that is necessary to preserve human existence.
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Anxiety is love's greatest killer. It makes others feel as you might when a drowning man holds on to you. You want to save him, but you know he will strangle you with his panic.
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Anxiety is neither a category of necessity nor a category of freedom; it is entangled freedom, where freedom is not free in itself but entangled, not by necessity, but in itself.
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Anxiety is part of creativity, the need to get something out, the need to be rid of something or to get in touch with something within.
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Anxiety is the beginning of conscience, which is the parent of the soul but is not compatible with innocence.
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Anxiety is the dizziness of freedom.
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Anxiety is the handmaiden of creativity.
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Anxiety is the interest paid on trouble before it is due.
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Anxiety is the poison of human life; the parent of many sins and of more miseries. - In a world where everything is doubtful, and where we may be disappointed, and be blessed in disappointment, why this restless stir and commotion of mind? - Can it alter the cause, or unravel the mystery of human events?
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Anxiety is the rust of life, destroying its brightness and weakening its power. - A childlike and abiding trust in Providence is its best preventive and remedy.
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Better be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident security.
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Borrow trouble for yourself, if that's your nature, but don't lend it to your neighbors.
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Do not anticipate trouble, or worry about what may never happen. Keep in the sunlight.
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How much pain have cost us the evils which have never happened.
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If pleasures are greatest in anticipation, just remember that this is also true of trouble.
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It is not the cares of today, but the cares of tomorrow, that weigh a man down. For the needs of today we have corresponding strength given. For the morrow we are told to trust. It is not ours yet.
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Let us be of good cheer, however, remembering that the misfortunes hardest to bear are those which never come.
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