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Paul Rogat Loeb Quotes

American author and activist, Birth: 4-7-1952
1.
Those who make us believe that anything’s possible and fire our imagination over the long haul, are often the ones who have survived the bleakest of circumstances. The men and women who have every reason to despair, but don’t, may have the most to teach us, not only about how to hold true to our beliefs, but about how such a life can bring about seemingly impossible social change.
Paul Rogat Loeb

2.
We become human only in the company of other human beings. And this involves both opening our hearts and giving voice to our deepest convictions. ...When we shrink from the world, our souls shrink, too.
Paul Rogat Loeb

3.
Possibility is the oxygen upon which hope thrives.
Paul Rogat Loeb

4.
Hope isn't an abstract theory about where human aspirations end and the impossible begins; it's a never-ending experiment, continually expanding the boundaries of the possible.
Paul Rogat Loeb

5.
None of us can predict when the causes we support will capture the public imagination, and our once-lonely quests become popular crusades.
Paul Rogat Loeb

Similar Authors: Rush Limbaugh Cassandra Clare Charles Spurgeon Deepak Chopra Stephen King George Bernard Shaw Winston Churchill Neil Gaiman Richelle Mead Jodi Picoult Francois de La Rochefoucauld Marianne Williamson Wayne Dyer Michel de Montaigne Victor Hugo
6.
When we shrink from the world, our souls shrink, too.
Paul Rogat Loeb

7.
History...shows that even seemingly miraculous advances are in fact the result of many people taking small steps together over a long period of time.
Paul Rogat Loeb

8.
Simply unleashing our imaginations can be empowering.
Paul Rogat Loeb

Quote Topics by Paul Rogat Loeb: Imagination Giving Thrive Heart Oxygen Empowering Men Long Shrinks World Abstract Lonely Opposites Inspirational Possibility Voice Unleashing Fire Together Believe People Soul Boundaries Impossible Environmental
9.
As Joanna Macy reminds us, "Information by itself can increase resistance [to engagement], deepening the sense of apathy and powerlessness." Stories about particular individuals and specific situations usually have the opposite effect. By giving unwieldy problems a human face, they also bring them down to a human-and thus manageable-scale.
Paul Rogat Loeb