|
Remember, there are no mistakes, only lessons. Love yourself, trust your choices, and everything is possible.
Trust opens up new and unimagined possibilities.
Many people are blind to trust, not so much to its benefits as to its nature and the practices that make it possible.
All trust involves vulnerability and risk, and nothing would count as trust if there were no possibility of betrayal.
Trust is a skill, one that is an aspect of virtually all human practices, cultures, and relationships.
Trust is a skill learned over time so that, like a well-trained athlete, one makes the right moves, usually without much reflection.
A man who doesn't trust himself can never really trust anyone else.
You may be deceived if you trust too much, but you will live in torment if you don't trust enough.
Trust in what you love, continue to do it, and it will take you where you need to go.
It takes years to build up trust, and only seconds to destroy it.
The glory of friendship is not the outstretched hand, nor the kindly smile, nor the joy of companionship;
it's the spiritual inspiration that comes to one when he discovers that someone else believes in him and is willing to
trust him with his friend.
Trust in dreams, for in them is hidden the gate to eternity.
Trust your own instinct. Your mistakes might as well be your own, instead of someone else's.
Trust thyself: every heart vibrates to that iron string.
Trust is a complex and slippery notion, and many of its intricacies have been recognized through out history.
Building trust begins with an appreciation and understanding of trust, but it also requires practice and practices.
Building trust means thinking about trust in a positive way.
True, trust necessarily carries with it uncertainties, but we must force ourselves to think about these uncertainties as possibilities and opportunities, not as liabilities.
Trust is not bound up with knowledge so much as it is with freedom, the openness to the unknown.
Trust is almost always conditional, focused, qualified, and therefore limited.
We also confuse trust with familiarity.
Familiarity can no longer be a necessary condition for trust.
Trust and the ability to identify trustworthiness are not the same thing, although trust and trustworthiness are logically linked.
When we say that trust is an emotional skill, this implies that emotional competence is a necessary part of trust.
A trustworthy person does not betray you, but you consider the betrayer to be trustworthy.
Most Popular Topics:
~One liners Quotes ~Trust Quotes ~Betrayal Quotes ~Hard Work Quotes ~Love Quotes ~Karma Quotes ~Friendship Quotes ~New Beginnings Quotes ~Disappointment Quotes ~Hope Quotes ~Hate Quotes ~Jealousy Quotes ~Memories Quotes ~Sex Quotes ~Smile Quotes ~Journey Quotes ~Family Quotes ~Sadness Quotes ~Passion Quotes ~Cheating Quotes Most Popular Authors:
~Kanye West~Bhagavad Gita ~Albert Einstein ~Anonymous ~William Shakespeare ~Mahatma Gandhi ~Ralph Waldo Emerson ~Oscar Wilde ~Buddha ~Abraham Lincoln ~C.S. Lewis ~Mark Twain ~wiz khalifa ~Bible ~Michael Jackson ~Tamil proverb ~Aristotle ~Maya Angelou ~Barack Obama ~Winston Churchill Recently updated Topics:
~Prosperity Quotes~Superiority Quotes ~Alienation Quotes ~Forest Quotes ~Missionaries Quotes ~Grammar Quotes ~Inflation Quotes ~Republican Quotes ~Deed Quotes ~Exploration Quotes ~Slyness Quotes ~Leaders Quotes ~Heir Quotes ~Propaganda Quotes ~Greetings Quotes ~Farewells Quotes ~Tragedy Quotes ~Nostalgia Quotes ~Design Quotes ~France Quotes |
Random Quote Trust
Trust makes life work. We eat food prepared by others, drive on roads built by others; we rely, every day, actions of others, and we are relied upon in turn. Where trust fails chaos closes in. Our entire civilization relies on a singular faith that we can count on others. Where trust is thick, we walk out of our homes, go shopping, play in the park, knowing that we are safe, knowing that danger is a rarity. Where trust is thin, we stay indoors, the parks are closed, the government corrupt, and danger is the norm. Life without trust is a fearful, ragged existence. We need it at large, to know that we can live as a society; we need it close at hand, to know we can love, and rely on our friends. Without trust, we are the lone wolf, proud and aloof. And inevitably doomed. |


