Getting Cooperation
“When people feel valued, they cooperate, when they feel devalued, they either resist or submit with resentment.”
— Steven Stosny, Compassion Power Boot Camp
“When people feel valued, they cooperate, when they feel devalued, they either resist or submit with resentment.”
— Steven Stosny, Compassion Power Boot Camp
“Everything you resent, you could feel compassionate about.”
— Steven Stosny, Compassion Power Boot Camp
“Shame is a necessary motivator to help you act according to your values.
Guilt and shame are not punishments; they are motivators.
You don’t need a defense against shame, if you take it as it is designed: as motivation to change your behavior.”
— Steven Stosny, Compassion Power Boot Camp, September 28, 2007
“We like to cooperate, but hate to be controlled.”
— Steven Stosny, Compassion Power Boot Camp, September 28, 2007
“Find the person who will love you because of your differences and not in spite of them, and you have found a lover for life.”
— Leo Buscaglia, Born for Love, p. 94
“Books are the ultimate Dumpees: put them down and they’ll wait for you forever; pay attention to them and they always love you back.”
John Green, An Abundance of Katherines, p. 110
“Blame makes you powerless.
“Responsibility gives you the power to make your life better….
“To grow and heal, you must remove the magnifying glass from others, and focus it exclusively on you….
“Power is the ability to act in your long-term best interest. It is behaving according to what you believe to be the most important things about you as a person.”
— Steven Stosny, Manual of the Core Value Workshop
“I’ve started to realize that waiting is an art, that waiting achieves things. Waiting can be very, very powerful. Time is a valuable thing. If you can wait two years, you can sometimes achieve something that you could not achieve today, however hard you worked, however much money you threw up in the air, however many times you banged your head against the wal. . . .”
— Dennis Wholey, The Courage to Change, quoted in Codependent No More, by Melody Beattie
“As the primary indicator of our ‘true feelings,’ emotions have become our new inner self, taking the place once occupied by the soul, the spirit, or the conscience. Now to question our anger, infatuation, sadness, and many other emotions is to question what is most sacred about us. It not only seems dishonest to let go of misery; it seems like a betrayal of who we really are.
“This redefinition of our core has thrown us deeper into chaos, especially since we have also redefined integrity, which used to mean being faithful to our core….
“Look at the dilemma we have gotten ourselves into by deciding that our emotions are our truest self. How can we be ourself if our self is changing every few minutes, as emotions invariably do? Not only are feelings never constant, we have layers of feelings heading in different directions….
“Emotions are like layers of files seen on a computer screen. The one we notice is merely the one we have clicked on. Even that analogy is an oversimplification because the contents of the files have lives of their own and the mouse likes to do a little extra browsing on its own. The bottom line is that if you make your emotions your inner self, you have chaos at your core.
“There is a place within us where we can touch the changeless and beautiful, a place where our real self is experienced in peace. This self does not have to be periodically vented, defragmented, or even defined. In gentleness and ease it is clearly seen, and everything about it is familiar — because this self is consistently whole.”
— Hugh Prather, The Little Book of Letting Go, p. 90-91