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Quote by Jennifer Elisabeth

“Don't allow yourself to feel guilty about wanting deep and endless love, amazing sex and opportunities that will change your life. Expect these things - work for them and don't ever stop until they're yours.”

Quote by Jennifer Elisabeth

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Jennifer Elisabeth

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“I flopped on the overstuffed kitchen couch and watched him go. I wondered what would happen to all his films and photographs in the upstairs closet - the documentaries on homelessness and drug addiction, the funny short subjects, the half-finished romantic comedy, the boxes of slice-of-life photographs that spoke volumes about the human condition. I wondered how you stop caring about what you've ached over, sweated over. (Thwonk)”

“We are working well when we use ourselves as the fellow creatures of the plants, animals, materials, and other people we are working with. Such work is unifying, healing. It brings us home from pride and from despair, and places us responsible within the human estate. It defines us as we are: not too good to work with our bodies, but too good to work poorly or joylessly or selfishly or alone. (pg. 134, The Body and the Earth)”

“Sadly, in our technological, impersonal, and avaricious consumer society, people merely hold on to jobs. They put in their time, leave at the five o'clock bell, pick up their pay checks, and leave the whole business behind them. Work, for so many, becomes a necessary evil. They go at it grudgingly, at best resignedly. It is hard to fault them; the stressful conditions and uncertainty under which so many workers labor force them into an adversarial relationship with their occupations and employers.”

“The symbol of the Lotus flower gives a precious teaching that can inspire us to deal with life in the best possible way. Its roots take nourishment from muddy waters and yet bloom in full delicacy and beauty on the surface. Similarly, to have a positive mindset is a beautiful quality; nonetheless to be transformational it needs to be rooted firmly in reality to then blossom with the value which can be created from the muddy problem(s)”

“The truth is despite the hard work and juggling required to keep the different facets of the frantic life afloat, the "superwoman" has one marvelous compensation. Being busy and being seen to be busy lets you off the hook. Buys you a way out of all aspects of your many roles you secretly despise ... like cleaning cupboards ... or entertaining your husband's business friends. When you combine wife, mother, career and all, each role become the perfect excuse for avoiding the worst aspects of the other.”

“Положение человека, живущего в чужой семье в качестве ли учителя, секретаря, компаньона, приживальщика, в большей части случаев стеснительное, зависимое от нанимателя и кормильца. "Я тружусь, следовательно, независим, сам себя знаю и ни пред кем не хочу гнуть спины" - такая истина редко имеет смысл в наших обществах. Протекцию, деньги, поклоны, пронырство, наушничество и тому подобные качества надобно иметь для того, чтобы добиться права на труд; а у нас хозяин почти всегда ломается над наёмщиком, купец над приказчиком, начальник над подчинённым, священник над дьячком; во всех сферах русского труда, который вам лично деньги приносит, подчинённый является нищим, получающим содержание от благодетеля-хозяина. Их этих экономических чисто русских, кровных начал наших вытекает принцип национальной независимости: "Ничего не делаю, значит - я свободен; нанимаю, значит - я независим"; тот же принцип, иначе выраженный: "Я много тружусь, следовательно, раб я; нанимаюсь, следовательно, чужой хлеб ем". Не труд нас кормит - начальство и место кормит; дающий работу - благодетель, работающий - благодетельствуемый; наши начальники - кормильцы. У нас само слово "работа" происходит от слова "раб"... Вот отсюда-то для многих очень естественно и законно вытекает презрение к труду как признаку зависимости и любовь к праздности как имеющей авторитет свободы и человеческого достоинства. - Н.Г. Помяловский "Мещанское счастье”

“What did you work at?” Colum asked, shifting a bit on the bench to look more directly at me. “I was in service,” I said quietly, more quietly than I intended. I wondered if maybe the answer had gotten lost in the rumble of the engines. It didn’t. “Honest work,” Colum said. I knew that that was what people say about work they consider beneath them. Hauling and scrubbing and digging are “honest work.” Grubbing and mucking? “Honest work.” Tell someone you’re a doctor or a mill owner, and they never say “honest work.”

Book:Clare