Robert Grudin Quotes and Sayings - Page 1
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“True teachers not only impart knowledge and method but awaken the love of learning by their own reflected love.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1990). “The Grace of Great Things: Creativity and Innovation”, Ticknor & Fields
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“All great experience has a guarded entrance and a windowless facade.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.14, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“We pamper the present like a spoiled child, obeying its superficial demands but ignoring its real needs.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.37, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“The happy individual is able to renew daily and with full consciousness all the basic expressions of human identity: work, love, communication, play, and rest.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.161, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“In the landscape of time, there are few locations less comfortable than that of one who waits for some person or event to arrive at some unknown moment in the future.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.102, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“Like students of art who walk around a great statue, seeing parts and aspects of it from each position, but never the whole, we must walk mentally around time, using a variety of approaches, a pandemonium of metaphor.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.2, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“Psychologically time is seldom homogenous but rather is as full of shapes as space.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.3, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“The extent to which we live from day to day, from week to week, intent on details and oblivious to larger presences, is a gauge of our impoverishment in time.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.2, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“Written truth is four-dimensional. If we consult it at the wrong time, or read it at the wrong place, it is as empty and shapeless as a dress on a hook.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.141, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“The mind which can totally and inanely forget its work and obligations is often also the mind which can, at the proper time, give them the fullest attention.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.133, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“We commonly think of freedom as the ability to define alternatives and choose between them. The creative mind exceeds this liberty in being able to redefine itself and reality at large, generating whole new sets of alternatives.”
-- Robert Grudin -
“Truth is rhythmical: if it implies stasis, it is platitude. Truth is syncopated: if it supplies all the terms, there is one term too many. Truth is barbed: if it comforts, it lies. Truth is an armed dancer.”
-- Robert Grudin -
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“Such self-transformation is the most difficult and dangerous challenge to the imagination, and it is the most rewarding. Meeting it is only possible for the person whose mind is open to contradictions and well-practiced in free conjecture.”
-- Robert Grudin -
“Those who labor for bread or money alone are condemned to their reward.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.162, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“The reason so many promises are not kept is the same as the reason they are made in the first place.”
-- Robert Grudin -
“No psychological message is so open to question as that which tells us that we have nothing left to do or to give.”
-- Robert Grudin -
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“To be open to inspiration, one must cultivate a leaning for the problematic, a chronic attraction to things that do not totally fit, agree, or make sense. Inspired ideas are less often solutions to old problems than newly discovered or totally reformulated problems - problems 'created' like brilliant works of art.”
-- Robert Grudin -
“Chess, which exists predominantly in two dimensions, is one of the world's most difficult games. Three-dimensional chess is an invitation to insanity. But human relationships, even of the simplest order, are like a kind of four-dimensional chess, a game whose pieces and positions change subtly and inexorably between moves, whose players stare dumbly while their powerful positions deteriorate into hopeless predicaments and while improbable combinations suddenly become inevitable. To make matters worse, some games are open to any number of players, and all sides are expected to win.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.95, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“The recalling of beautiful things, whether they are your own experiences or the acheivements of others, is a creative act. Simple ideas can be restated by rote; but profound ideas must be recreated by will and imagination.”
-- Robert Grudin -
“Great drama, like the energy implicit in every atom, is eternally around and within us, but liberated only by coincidence, ceremony, creativity, periods reaching completion, pressures reaching the bursting point, and the simple but painful cultivation of awareness.”
-- Robert Grudin -
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“What liberates the imagination is the sense that work in its theory and practice holds aesthetic possibilities, that jobs can be elegantly conceived and gracefully done. This sense of beauty unlocks feelings of pleasure and love and breaks down the barrier between worker and work and commit to work not merely the "thinking" consciousness but the full resources of mind.”
-- Robert Grudin -
“The future is like the daytime moon, a diffident but faithful companion, so elegant as to be almost invisible, an inconspicuous marvel.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.44, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“Fast drivers can see no further than slow drivers, but they must look further down the road to time their reactions safely. Similarly, people with great projects afoot habitually look further and more clearly into the future than people who are mired in day-to-day concerns.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.2, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“True intimacy is a human constant. People of all types find it equally hard to achieve, equally precious to hold. Age, education, social status, make little difference here; even genius does not presuppose the talent to reveal one's self completely and completely absorb one's self in another personality. Intimacy is to love what concentration is to work: a simultaneous drawing together to attention and release of energy.”
-- Robert Grudin -
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“Free men and women... can think across time, viewing their own lives, inclusive of past, present, and future, as architectural wholes, static in mental space. They can therefore see, as others cannot, the cracks and buttresses of repeated action, the points of stress, the established framework. They are not perfect; but they are less imperfect than we by a full dimension of being.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.5, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“That morning I experienced vividly, if almost subliminally, the reality of change itself: how it fools our sentinels and undermines our defenses, how careful we are to look for it in the wrong places, how it does not reveal itself until it is beyond redress, how vainly we search for it around us and find too late that is has occurred within us.”
-- Robert Grudin -
“Happiness may well consist primarily of an attitude toward time.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.188, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“At pains to define liberty, that most resolute of indefinables, our minds fall back on spatial images; on birds, sailboats, and mountains; the untethered balloon, the blue sky, the nude figure.”
-- Robert Grudin -
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“Plans made swiftly and intuitively are likely to have flaws. Plans made carefully and comprehensively are sure to.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1997). “Time and the Art of Living”, p.102, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
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“We struggle with, agonize over and bluster heroically about the great questions of life when the answers to most of these lie hidden in our attitude toward the thousand minor details of each day.”
-- Robert GrudinSource : Robert Grudin (1982). “Time and the art of living”, Harpercollins