1.
Years ago I heard the Indian Jesuit Raimundo Panikkar say: Expect Nothing.
Lawrence Fagg
2.
I'm afraid my glass is no longer half full because I drank most of it.
Lawrence Fagg
3.
To insist that I am not forgiven is a kind of inverse arrogance.
Lawrence Fagg
4.
How much more comfortable it is to say 'Yes, and...' than 'Yes, but...'.
Lawrence Fagg
5.
We all have the right to be wrong and be loved just the same.
Lawrence Fagg
6.
Until we can sense a sacred quality in time we will not begin to have a fuller understanding of it.
Lawrence Fagg
7.
I feel that the only true security I have is my capacity, however limited, to love.
Lawrence Fagg
8.
Ideals are great as long as they don't get in the way of what we want to do.
Lawrence Fagg
9.
I think that an act of love is immortal; once tendered, it can never really be taken back.
Lawrence Fagg
10.
If there were no nobodies, The somebodies would not have anybody, To convince that they were somebody, Except some other somebody, Who would not be convinced anyway.
Lawrence Fagg
11.
Before I can accept someone's help, I must accept their presence.
Lawrence Fagg
12.
The man who says that he does not deserve his wife is probably right, but not for the reasons he thinks.
Lawrence Fagg
13.
I see a good marriage as being like two tall trees growing beside each other, each nourishing the grace of the other.
Lawrence Fagg
14.
On the whole I feel that life has treated me rather well, but I sometimes wonder how well have I treated life.
Lawrence Fagg
15.
Everything I do or say will be forgotten in a few short years. Yet how amazing and wonderful it is that somehow I still care, just simply care about whatever I do, and will probably do so until my dying moment.
Lawrence Fagg
16.
One of the small consolations of old age, if you are lucky, can be at least a partial recovery of innocence.
Lawrence Fagg
17.
Life is a process of continually reordering priorities.
Lawrence Fagg
18.
For some of us life is so fantastic we can't stand it.
Lawrence Fagg
19.
How unfortunate it is to be constrained by what people might say at our funeral or on our gravestone.
Lawrence Fagg
20.
How often have I tried just hard enough so that I can then say to myself that I tried with the real purpose of assuaging my guilt about something I did not wish to succeed in the first place?
Lawrence Fagg
21.
How frustrating it is to be out-argued by someone you know is dead wrong but is more eloquent.
Lawrence Fagg
22.
It is said that in life we must play with the cards we are dealt, but too often I have kept those cards too close to my chest.
Lawrence Fagg