Be willing to stop punishing yourself for your mistakes. Love yourself for your willingness to learn and grow.
I don't think that bravery is about skin. Bravery is about a willingness to show emotional need.
All of the great leaders have had one characteristic in common: it was the willingness to confront unequivocally the major anxiety of their people in their time. This, and not much else, is the essence of leadership.
Being willing makes you able.
Our willingness to wait reveals the value we place on the object we're waiting for.
There really is a camaraderie among chefs and a willingness to help out whenever we can.
The willingness to empty ourselves and then seek our true nature is an expression of great and courageous love.
What we call the secret of happiness is no more a secret than our willingness to choose life.
To watch an American on a beach or crowding into a subway, or buying a theater ticket, or sitting at home with his radio on, tells you something about one aspect of the American character: the capacity to withstand a great deal of outside interference, so to speak; a willing acceptance of frenzy which though it's never self-conscious, amounts o a willingness to let other people have and assert their own lively, and even offensive, character. They are a tough race in this.
Success, in my view, is the willingness to strive for something you really want
Courage and willingness to just go for it, whether it is a conversation or a spontaneous trip or trying new things that are scary - it is a really attractive quality.
Tattoos are a right of passage. They're a marker of bravery, of maturity, of cultural acceptance. The tattoo represents not only a willingness to accept pain - to endure it - but a need to actively embrace it. Because life is painful - beautiful but painful.
That's what world leadership is: A willingness to point at bad guys and say they're the bad guys and to keep the bad guys from getting worse! That's leadership. Obama didn't want to go there.
The most striking thing about highly effective leaders is how little they have in common. What one swears by, another warns against. But one trait stands out: the willingness to risk.
I have always emphasized the willingness to discard.
Courage is willingness to take the risk once you know the odds. Optimistic overconfidence means you are taking the risk because you don't know the odds. It's a big difference.
The willingness to fail gives us the freedom to succeed.
The longevity of every relationship is decided by the willingness to forgive
Prayer opens our lives for God so his will can be done in and through us, because in true prayer we habitually put ourselves into the attitude of willingness to do whatever God wills.
The mark of a civilized man is his willingness to re-examine his most cherished beliefs.