alain de botton Quotes That Will Inspire You to Live Your Best Life
alain de botton quotes that inspire a great attitude towards life That Will Inspire You to Live Your Best Life
1. Do you love me enough that I may be weak with you? Everyone loves strength, but do you love me for my weakness? That is the real test.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- love
2. For the rest of history, for most of us, our bright promise will always fall short of being actualised; it will never earn us bountiful sums of money or beget exemplary objects or organisations....Most of us stand poised at the edge of brilliance, haunted by the knowledge of our proximity, yet still demonstrably on the wrong side of the line, our dealings with reality undermined by a range of minor yet critical psychological flaws (a little too much optimism, an unprocessed rebelliousness, a fatal impatience or sentimentality). We are like an exquisite high-speed aircraft which for lack of a tiny part is left stranded beside the runway, rendered slower than a tractor or a bicycle.
The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- success
3. However powerful our technology and complex our corporations, the most remarkable feature of the modern working world may in the end be internal, consisting in an aspect of our mentalities: in the widely held belief that our work should make us happy. All societies have had work at their centre; ours is the first to suggest that it could be something more than a punishment or a penance. Ours is the first to imply that we should seek to work even in the absence of a financial imperative.
The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- happiness
4. If one felt successful, there'd be so little incentive to be successful.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- success
5. One rarely falls in love without being as much attracted to what is interestingly wrong with someone as what is objectively healthy.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- love
6. One's doing well if age improves even slightly one's capacity to hold on to that vital truism: "This too shall pass.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- truth
7. Philosophy, art, politics, religion and bohemia have never sought to do away entirely with the status hierarchy; they have attemptee, rather, to institute new kinds of hierarchies based on sets of values unrecognised by, and critical of, those of the majority.. They have provided us with persuasive and consoling reminders that there is more than one way of succeeding in life.
Status Anxiety
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- success
8. The materialistic view of happiness of our age starkly revealed in our understanding of the word "luxury.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- happiness
9. The media insists on taking what someone didn't mean to say as being far closer to the truth than what they did.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- truth
10. The start receives such disproportionate attention because it isn't deemed to be just one phase among many; for the Romantic, it contains in a concentrated form everything significant about love as a whole. Which is why, in so many love stories, there is simply nothing else for the narrator to do with a couple after they have triumphed over a range of initial obstacles other than to consign them to an ill-defined contented future--or kill them off. What we typically call love is only the start of love.
The Course of Love
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- Romance
11. We don't need to be constantly reasonable in order to have good relationships; all we need to have mastered is the occasional capacity to acknowledge with good grace that we may, in one or two areas, be somewhat insane.
The Course of Love
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- truth
12. ...workplace dynamics are no less complicated or unexpectedly intense than family relations, with only the added difficulty that whereas families are at least well-recognised and sanctioned loci for hysteria reminiscent of scenes from Medea, office life typically proceeds behind a mask of shallow cheerfulness, leaving workers grievously unprepared to handle the fury and sadness continually aroused by their colleagues.
The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- Relationships
13. Curiosity takes ignorance seriously, and is confident enough to admit when it does not know. It is aware of not knowing, and it sets out to do something about it
Art as Therapy
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- knowledge
14. Don't despair: despair suggests you are in total control and know what is coming. You don't - surrender to events with hope.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- hope
15. Far from rejecting outright any hierarchy of success or failure, philosophy instead reconfigures the judging process, lending legitimacy to theidea that themainstream value system may unfairly consign some people to disgrace and others to respectability.
Status Anxiety
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- philosophy
16. Intimacy is the capacity to be rather weird with someone - and finding that that's ok with them.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- Relationships
17. It is hope--with regard to our careers, our love lives, our children, our politicians, and our planet--that is primarily to blame for angering and embittering us. The incompatibility between the grandeur of our aspirations and the mean reality of our condition generates the violent disappointments which rack our days and etch themselves in lines of acrimony across our faces.
Religion for Atheists: A Non-Believer's Guide to the Uses of Religion
Author:- alain de botton
Category:- hope
18. Marriage: a hopeful, generous, infinitely kind gamble taken by two people who don’t know yet who they are or who the other might be, binding themselves to a future they cannot conceive of and have carefully omitted to investigate.
The Course of Love
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- Relationships
19. The difference between hope and despair is a different way of telling stories from the same facts.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- hope
20. The feeling one has no time to get anything done provides the pressure that guarantees one does get some things done.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- time
21. The moment we cry in a film is not when things are sad but when they turn out to be more beautiful than we expected them to be.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- philosophy
22. The most boring and unproductive question one can ask of any religion is whether or not it is true.
Religion for Atheists: A Non-Believer's Guide to the Uses of Religion
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- philosophy
23. The price we have paid for expecting to be so much more than our ancestors is a perpetual anxiety that we are far from being all we might be.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- philosophy
24. We believe we are seeking happiness in love, but what we are really after is familiarity. We are looking to re-create, within our adult relationships, the very feelings we knew so well in childhood and which were rarely limited to just tenderness and care. The love most of us will have tasted early on came entwined with other, more destructive dynamics: feelings of wanting to help an adult who was out of control, of being deprived of a parent’s warmth or scared of his or her anger, or of not feeling secure enough to communicate our trickier wishes.How logical, then, that we should as adults find ourselves rejecting certain candidates not because they are wrong but because they are a little too right—in the sense of seeming somehow excessively balanced, mature, understanding, and reliable—given that, in our hearts, such rightness feels foreign and unearnt. We chase after more exciting others, not in the belief that life with them will be more harmonious, but out of an unconscious sense that it will be reassuringly familiar in its patterns of frustration.
The Course of Love
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- Relationships
25. What makes the prospect of death distinctive in the modern age is the background of permanent technological and sociological revolution against which it is set, and which serves to strip us of any possible faith in the permanence of our labours. Our ancestors could believe that their achievements had a chance of bearing up against the flow of events. We know time to be a hurricane. Our buildings, our sense of style, our ideas, all of these will soon enough be anachronisms, and the machines in which we now take inordinate pride will seem no less bathetic than Yorick's skull.
The Pleasures and Sorrows of Work
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- time
26. You have to be quite heavily invested in someone to do them the honour of telling them you're annoyed with them.
Author:- Alain de Botton
Category:- Relationships
