Salzberg Quotes
Collection of top 100 famous quotes about Salzberg
Salzberg Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Salzberg quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
What you learn about pain in formal meditation can help you relate to it in your daily life.
— Sharon Salzberg
Mindfulness helps us see the addictive aspect of self-criticism - a repetitive cycle of flaying ourselves again and again, feeling the pain anew.
— Sharon Salzberg
When we set an intention to explore our emotional hot spots, we create a pathway to real love.
— Sharon Salzberg
We learn from conflicts only when we are willing to do so.
— Sharon Salzberg
As we practice meditation we are bringing forth ease, presence, compassion, wisdom & trust.
— Sharon Salzberg
Mindfulness isn't difficult, we just need to remember to do it.
— Sharon Salzberg
I will love myself as long as I never make a mistake.
— Sharon Salzberg
We long for permanence but everything in the known universe is transient. That's a fact but one we fight.
— Sharon Salzberg
Fearful of wasting a second, we hoard time as if it were money.
— Sharon Salzberg
Even in the midst of devastation, something within us always points the way to freedom.
— Sharon Salzberg
The starting place for radical re-imagining of love is mindfulness.
— Sharon Salzberg
Training our mind through meditation does not mean forcibly subjugating it or beating it into shape.
— Sharon Salzberg
Our practice rather than being about killing the ego is about simply discovering our true nature.
— Sharon Salzberg
Asking questions is an opportunity for creativity and personal expression, both for the person asking and the person answering.
— Sharon Salzberg
When we contemplate the miracle of embodied life, we begin to partner with our bodies in a kinder way.
— Sharon Salzberg
Meeting people in a genuine way and feeling like there is a vital and meaningful connection going on makes me come alive.
— Sharon Salzberg
Let the breath lead the way.
— Sharon Salzberg
If we have nothing material to give, we can offer our attention, our energy, our appreciation. The world needs us. It doesn't deplete us to give.
— Sharon Salzberg
Often in close relationships, the subject being discussed is not the subject at all.
— Sharon Salzberg
Real love allows for failure and suffering.
— Sharon Salzberg
When we relate to ourselves with loving kindness, perfectionism naturally drops away.
— Sharon Salzberg
Effort is the unconstrained willingness to persevere through difficulty.
— Sharon Salzberg
When we open our hearts to the breadth of our experiences, we learn to tune into our needs, unique perceptions, thoughts & feelings
— Sharon Salzberg
Loving kindness is the practice of offering to oneself and others wishes to be happy, peaceful, healthy, strong
— Sharon Salzberg
To sense which gifts to accept & which to leave behind is our path to discovering freedom.
— Sharon Salzberg
Through meditation we come to know that we are dying & being reborn in every moment.
— Sharon Salzberg
Love is a living capacity within us that is always present, even when we don't sense it.
— Sharon Salzberg
Forgiveness is the way we break the grip that long-held resentments have on our hearts.
— Sharon Salzberg
When we practice metta, we open continuously to the truth of our actual experience, changing our relationship to life.
— Sharon Salzberg
The practice of loving-kindness is about cultivating love as a trans-formative strength,
— Sharon Salzberg
Resilience Practicing Self-Care To Avoid Burnout The Illusion of Control Patience and Perspective Resilience In The Face
— Sharon Salzberg
Meditation is a microcosm, a model, a mirror. The skills we practice when we sit are transferable to the rest of our lives.
— Sharon Salzberg
We can understand the inherent radiance & purity of our minds by understanding metta. Like the mind, metta is not distorted by what it encounters.
— Sharon Salzberg
Mindfulness is so much wiser and more robust than our inner critic.
— Sharon Salzberg
Vulnerability should be the thing that brings us closer than anything because we all share that.
— Sharon Salzberg
As we practice meditation, we get used to stillness and eventually are able to make
friends with the quietness of our sensations. — Sharon Salzberg
friends with the quietness of our sensations. — Sharon Salzberg
Having' something makes us think we can control it.
— Sharon Salzberg
Integration arises from intimacy with our emotions and our bodies, as well as with our thoughts.
— Sharon Salzberg
I need to start over. I can't just stay stuck in this place. This is a wonderful skill to bring to your life.
— Sharon Salzberg
Vulnerability in the face of constant change is what we share, whatever our present condition.
— Sharon Salzberg
To offer our hearts in faith means recognizing that our hearts are worth something, that we ourselves, in our deepest and truest nature, are of value.
— Sharon Salzberg
A lack of real love for ourselves is one of the most constricting, painful conditions we can know.
— Sharon Salzberg
The more we practice mindfulness, the more alert we become to the cost of keeping secrets.
— Sharon Salzberg
Meditation isn't about what's happening; it's about how you relate to what's happening.
— Sharon Salzberg
What unites us as human beings is an urge for happiness which at heart is a yearning for union.
— Sharon Salzberg
There is a sentiment common among most of us when it comes to love - letting go can feel scary.
— Sharon Salzberg
Faith is not a commodity we either have or don't have-it is an inner quality that unfolds as we learn to trust our own deepest experience.
— Sharon Salzberg
Compassion Judgment Loving-Kindness Compassion Is A Force Disconnection Self-Blame and Compassion Praise and Blame
— Sharon Salzberg
Although love is often depicted as starry-eyed and sweet, love for the self is made of tougher stuff.
— Sharon Salzberg
Meditation is not about what's happening, it is about how we're relating to what's happening.
— Sharon Salzberg
There are many different ways to practice meditation; it's good to experiment until you find one that seems to suit you.
— Sharon Salzberg
Concepts such as loving kindness should never be used as weapons against our real feelings.
— Sharon Salzberg
We learn and grow and are transformed not so much by what we do but by why and how we do it.
— Sharon Salzberg
Each opportunity to interrupt the onslaught of thoughts and return to the object of meditation is, in fact, a moment of enlightenment
— Sharon Salzberg
I've spent quite a bit of my life as a meditation teacher and writer commending the strengths of love and compassion.
— Sharon Salzberg
Perfection is fragile; interacting with something that seems perfect puts it in peril.
— Sharon Salzberg
It's affirming that we can look at any experience from the fullness of our being and get past the shame we carry.
— Sharon Salzberg
With every action we take, we send love or suffering into the web that connects us.
— Sharon Salzberg
There is so much we just can't see or know right now, including precisely how our actions will ripple out.
— Sharon Salzberg
If we define ourselves by each of the ever-changing feelings that cascade through us, how will we ever feel at home in our own bodies and minds?
— Sharon Salzberg
To celebrate someone else's life, we need to find a way to look at it straight on, not from above with judgment or from below with envy.
— Sharon Salzberg
We often get caught up in our own reactions and forget the vulnerability of the person in front of us.
— Sharon Salzberg
We're in charge of our own forgiveness, and the process takes time, patience, and intention.
— Sharon Salzberg
Develop a mind so filled with love that it resembles space.
— Sharon Salzberg
When we are willing to explore our own experiences, we open the doorway to deeper connection and intimacy.
— Sharon Salzberg
We need to redefine community and find a variety of ways of coming together and helping each other.
— Sharon Salzberg
Concentration Attention Multitasking Boredom Procrastination
— Sharon Salzberg
Find a gap between a trigger event and our usual conditioned response to it and by using that pause to collect ourselves and shift our response
— Sharon Salzberg
Letting go is an inside job, something only we can do for ourselves.
— Sharon Salzberg
Mindfulness helps us to set boundaries by revealing what makes us unhappy & what brings us peace.
— Sharon Salzberg
The more we practice sympathetic joy, the more we come to realize that the happiness we share with others is inseparable from our own happiness.
— Sharon Salzberg
When you're wide open, the world is a good place.
— Sharon Salzberg
Each decision we make, each action we take, is born out of an intention.
— Sharon Salzberg
How we traverse the space between us when conflict arises has a profound effect on the health and longevity of our relationships.
— Sharon Salzberg
We use mindfulness to observe the way we cling to pleasant experiences & push away unpleasant ones.
— Sharon Salzberg
You can see your thoughts and emotions arise & create space for them even if they are uncomfortable.
— Sharon Salzberg
But to take delight in our generosity helps us immeasurably in our spiritual practice.
— Sharon Salzberg
The skills available to us through mindfulness make it possible to bring love to our connections with others.
— Sharon Salzberg
Telling the story, acknowledging what has happened and how you feel, is often a necessary part of forgiveness.
— Sharon Salzberg
Compassion grows in us when we know how the energy of love is available all around us.
— Sharon Salzberg
We can free ourselves from the old stories that have reduced us & allow real love for ourselves to blossom.
— Sharon Salzberg
Feelings of apathy as they relate to our relationships often stem from insufficiently paying attention to those around us.
— Sharon Salzberg
Our ability to connect with others is innate, wired into our nervous systems, and we need connection as much as we need physical nourishment.
— Sharon Salzberg
The heart is a generous muscle.
— Sharon Salzberg
Even on the spiritual path, we have things we'll tend to cover up or be in denial about.
— Sharon Salzberg
The journey to loving ourselves doesn't mean we like everything.
— Sharon Salzberg