28 Quotes & Sayings By Alexandra Robbins

Alexandra Robbins is the author of the 'new release' book, The Sleep-Walking Husband, and her work has been featured in the Huffington Post and The Washington Post. She attended the University of Tennessee and has a degree in English and creative writing. She and her husband live in Greensboro, NC with their two children.

1
Students didn't much like those who verbally or physically beat the crap out of them. But when researchers began measuring aggression alongside perceived popularity, they found an undeniably strong link. Recent studies conclude that aggressive behaviors are now often associated with high social status. Psychologists no longer view aggression as a last-resort tactic of social misfits. Now they see aggression as a means toward social success. (This does not, however, mean it is admired.) . Alexandra Robbins
2
Although she was gregarious, she inadvertently separated herself from people because she was so often inside her own head, focusing on her creativity. Alexandra Robbins
3
Gaming was "one of the only times when you only have to focus on one thing." But even more than that, "It's like an anchor. As long as I know it's there, it's part of me. It's some form of continuity that in my life I desperately need. Alexandra Robbins
4
If there is a single factor that spells out the difference between the cafeteria fringe headed for greatness and those doomed for low self-worth, even more than a caring teacher or a group of friends, it is supportive, accepting parents who not only love their children unconditionally, but also don't make them feel as if their idiosyncrasies qualify as "conditions" in the first place. Alexandra Robbins
5
Imagine what it must be like for teenagers who don't feel they have room to breathe in their own homes. If you are a parent reading this book, you care about your child. If she is quirky, unusual, or nonconformist, ask yourself whether you are doing everything you can to nurture her unusual interests, style, or skills, or whether instead you are directly or subtly pushing her to hide them. Alexandra Robbins
6
Too many parents fail to understand that there is a difference between fitting in and being liked, that there is a difference between being "normal" and being happy. High school is temporary. Family is not. Alexandra Robbins
7
My heart broke not only for the daughter who already was forced to become her mother's alarmingly narrow ideal, but also for the middle daughter who knew that her in mother's mind she had already failed. Alexandra Robbins
8
Sometimes Eli believed his mother was embarrassed by him. "I swear, my mom thinks if I do one thing differently than the average person, I'm weird, " Eli said later. "It's like she thinks I'm a freak or something. No matter what I do, it's not 'normal' enough for her. Alexandra Robbins
9
Group membership can modify individuals' perceptions of themselves. Unable to separate their personal introspection from the ways they believe other people perceive them, teenagers may have what psychologists call an "imaginary audience", meaning that they believed that other people are just as attuned to their appearance and behavior as they are. Alexandra Robbins
10
I figure I'll win the fight in twenty years or so anyways when I end up with a decent life and their unemployed and living at home. Alexandra Robbins
11
In the minds of their peers, too often students become caricatures of themselves. Alexandra Robbins
12
Studies have shown that, at least among students, popularity equals visibility. Alexandra Robbins
13
Being indie means being artistic and finding your own eccentric identity. The name of the game for being an indie kid is to never admit you are one. If you do, it goes against your beliefs against labeling, thus making you a hypocrite. Alexandra Robbins
14
The human brain takes in information from other people and incorporates it with the information coming from its own senses, neuroscientist Gregory Berns has written. Many times, the group's opinion trumps the individual's before he even becomes aware of it. Alexandra Robbins
15
Nonconformists aren't just going against the grain; they're going against the brain. Either their brains aren't taking the easy way out to begin with, or in standing apart from their peers, these students are standing up to their biology. Alexandra Robbins
16
If teachers are uncomfortable at their own school, they will pass on their uncertainties or negative attitude to students. Alexandra Robbins
17
Being an outsider doesn't necessarily indicate any sort of social failing. We do not view a tuba player as musically challenged if he cannot play the violin. Alexandra Robbins
18
The 1970s, fewer than 25% of US residents lived in counties in which the presidential candidate won by landslide. 30 years later, that percentage has nearly doubled. Alexandra Robbins
19
He didn't realize that simply by mingling among various lunch tables, he was befriending people in different crowds, weaving together the fringes of the cafeteria. Alexandra Robbins
20
It was a relief to inhabit someone else's life for a while, to get her personal issues for a brief respite. In a play, she knew exactly how all her character's problems would be resolved. No matter how the cast performed, the end turned out the same. No questions, no worries, no unknowns. Alexandra Robbins
21
Part of the problem is that people at our school don't listen. They just put on the headphones and tune out the world. It's intimidating. Alexandra Robbins
22
The cafeteria made him feel like an observer rather than a participant in the high school experience. Alexandra Robbins
23
How could he encapsulate in a pithy admissions-interview line all of his unique ideas and interests? Alexandra Robbins
24
Many of the differences that cause students to be excluded in school are actually the same qualities or skills that other people are going to admire, respect or value about that person in adulthood. Alexandra Robbins
25
Adults tell students that it gets better, that the world changes after school, that being 'different' will pay off sometime after graduation. But no one explains to them why. Alexandra Robbins
26
A Health Affairs study comparing patient-satisfaction scores with HCAHPS surveys of almost 100, 000 nurses showed that a better nurse work environment was associated with higher scores on every patient-satisfaction survey question. Alexandra Robbins
27
When Department of Health and Human Services administrators decided to base 30 percent of hospitals' Medicare reimbursement on patient satisfaction survey scores, they likely figured that transparency and accountability would improve healthcare. Alexandra Robbins