Motivation

A talent grows by being used, and withers if it is not used.

May Sarton

May Sarton was a prolific writer whose body of work includes 19 novels and 17 books of poetry. Her most popular and enduring writing, however, is found in her journals and memoirs, which includePlant Dreaming Deep,” “Journal of a Solitude,” and “The House by the Sea.” The latter, written after Sarton moved from New Hampshire to the coast of Maine in 1973, is a profoundly personal account of solitude, nature, and the creative process. In it, Sarton compares talent to a plant, writing that “it may simply wither if it is not given enough food, sun, tender care. And to give it those things means working at it every day.”

May Sarton
May Sarton
Belgian-American novelist (1912-1995)
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Love

Every gift from a friend is a wish for your happiness.

Richard Bach

Author Richard Bach wrote several bestselling books in the 1970s, many of which were semi-autobiographical and pulled from his own career as an aviator and Navy pilot. While most of his stories center on the experience of flying, with this quote Bach speaks to us about friendship and love, and the power of giving. He notes that a gift from a friend is more than the object being gifted: The thought behind it is an expression of love, because it’s a genuine wish for you to be happy.

Richard Bach
Richard Bach
Author and pilot (1936-present)
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Wisdom

All journeys have secret destinations of which the traveler is unaware.

Martin Buber

When we set out on life’s journeys, we assume our plans and preparations will keep us firmly on course. But we are often blindsided by the twists and turns that the road takes, and we hardly ever end up where we expected. This observation comes from Martin Buber, a prominent German Jewish philosopher, educator, and political activist in the first half of the 20th century. He suggests that embracing these detours for the hidden benefits they bring is a critical part of learning, growing, and enjoying life.

Martin Buber
Martin Buber
Austrian-Israeli philosopher (1878-1965)
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To Taika Waititi, directing, writing, and acting aren’t just jobs, but tools for his true profession: being creative. The New Zealander describes his artistic process as neverending, because every work elicits a conversation with his audience. In an interview with “The Talks,” published the day after Waititi won the 2020 Best Adapted Screenplay Oscar for “Jojo Rabbit,” he revealed the importance of experimentation. Once a plan is in place, it’s time to consider fresh perspectives. There are no limits to where your imagination — or other people’s insights — can take you.
Taika Waititi
Taika Waititi
New Zealand filmmaker and actor (1975-present)
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Happiness

I feel that we're all lighthouses, and my job is to shine my light as brightly as I can to the darkness.

Jim Carrey

Jim Carrey’s career began in 1977 when he made his first stand-up comedy appearance at the age of 15. After he found TV stardom on the sketch comedy "In Living Color," global fame came in 1994, a breakthrough year in which he starred in not one but three smash films: “Ace Ventura: Pet Detective,” “The Mask,” and “Dumb and Dumber.” His unique blend of riotous slapstick and funny faces made him a beloved household name, but he also showed real acting chops in movies such as “The Truman Show,” “Man on the Moon,” and “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.” Whether he’s playing the Grinch or God, Carrey has always sought to bring his unique light to the performance. “I'm going to do whatever I can to bring to the world something creative, something challenging, something inventive,” he told the “L.A. Times.” “And whenever possible, when pain happens, when confusion happens, when disillusionment happens, I turn it into something.”  

Jim Carrey
Jim Carrey
Actor (1962-present)
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Motivation

I would unite with anybody to do right; and with nobody to do wrong.

Frederick Douglass

Frederick Douglass, one of America’s greatest orators and abolitionists, expressed this principle in a lecture given to the Ladies of the Rochester Anti-Slavery Sewing Society in 1855. In his decades building coalitions to end slavery and fight for civil rights, Douglass had come to understand the necessity — and potential dangers — of political alliances. He was willing to engage in dialogue with almost anyone, across racial and ideological divides, if he believed it would be fruitful — but he would also break with potential allies if they pursued unjust ends or employed unethical methods. His principle remains just as relevant today: to build community around shared and honorable goals while taking care not to sacrifice our ethical principles for convenience or blind loyalty.

Frederick Douglass
Frederick Douglass
Abolitionist and orator (1818-1895)
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Love

For small creatures such as we the vastness is bearable only through love.

Carl Sagan

Carl Sagan, the astronomer and science communicator who helped explain the universe to the masses in his TV series “Cosmos: A Personal Voyage,” wrote this line in his 1985 novel “Contact.” The book focuses on extraterrestrial contact and is centered around protagonist Ellie Arroway, an astronomer who detects a signal from a nearby star she believes could only have been sent by an intelligent civilization. The book raises a fundamental question of our existence: How do we psychologically grapple with our own seeming insignificance in the face of the universe’s vastness? Sagan’s answer, of course, is that we create meaning in our lives through the love we share.

Carl Sagan
Carl Sagan
Astronomer and science communicator (1934-1996)
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Wisdom

We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be.

Kurt Vonnegut

This cautionary statement appears in Kurt Vonnegut’s 1962 novel “Mother Night,” which presents the purported confessions of Howard W. Campbell Jr., a Nazi propagandist and American spy during World War II. The character discovers his false persona has become indistinguishable from his true self, raising complex questions about identity and morality. Vonnegut, who witnessed the firebombing of Dresden as a prisoner of war, understood how powerful our repeated actions and assumed roles can be — whether they’re adopted consciously or otherwise. If we pretend to be something or someone for long enough — be it for survival, social advantage, or simple experimentation — that pretense can shape our actual identity, potentially in unexpected ways.

Kurt Vonnegut
Kurt Vonnegut
Author (1922-2007)
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Hope

I'm an idealist. I don't know where I'm going, but I'm on my way.

Carl Sandburg

Three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and author Carl Sandburg was intrigued by the human condition, specifically as it relates to class divides and the common man. In “Incidentals,” his slim volume of poetry and prose published in 1904, the “workingman’s poet” (as Sandburg became known) wrote that he had witnessed “the extremes of magnificence and destitution” yet still remained an idealist. “I can see humanity blundering on toward some splendid goal,” Sandburg mused. His quote here serves to remind us that we may never understand how the world works or why things happen, but we are still “a part of it all and it is all good.”

Carl Sandburg
Carl Sandburg
Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and biographer (1878-1967)
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Widely considered one of the great writers of the 20th century, Nikos Kazantzakis is known for his plays, prose, and poetry that drew heavily from the philosophical tenets of Christianity, Marxism, and Buddhism. Born in Crete in 1883 while the island was fighting for its independence from the Ottoman Empire, he went on to serve in the Greek government after World War II then work for UNESCO as a literary advisor. Through all of his adventures and travels he continued writing, and his work earned him nine nominations for the Nobel Prize in literature. One of his most famous books, “The Last Temptation of Christ,” was wildly controversial, but Kazantzakis weathered the ensuing storm with grace. When he died at the age of 74, his tombstone was carved with the inscription: “I hope for nothing. I’m not afraid of anything. I am free.”

Nikos Kazantzakis
Nikos Kazantzakis
Greek writer, journalist, and politician (1883-1957)
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