4 Quotes & Sayings By Dorothy Whipple

Dorothy Whipple was born in 1930 in Woods Hole, Massachusetts. She received her B.A. degree from Sarah Lawrence College in 1955 and attended the University of Nevada, Las Vegas where she received her M.S. degree in 1955 and her Ph.D Read more

in 1960. Dr. Whipple began teaching at USC in 1958 and has been at USC ever since.

Her research interests include the effects of stress on the cardiovascular system and the biochemistry of stress hormones in humans and animals. From 1962 to 1966 she was a research associate at the National Institutes of Health in Washington D.C. Dr.

Whipple is currently a professor of nutrition and exercise physiology at USC, where she also is director of the Human Performance Laboratory that is affiliated with the School of Medicine and is part of the John McKay Center for Life Sciences. She is a member of both the American Heart Association and the American Physiological Society, and serves as co-chairperson for both organization's Women's Heart Councils.

1
All those books, all those prayers and she had got nothing from them. When everything went well for her she had been able to pray, she couldn't now. There was such urgency in her present situation that until the pressure was removed she couldn't think about God. She hadn't the patience to pray. It was a shock to her. Surely God was for these times? Dorothy Whipple
2
If we could be seen thinking, we would show blown bright one moment, dark the next, like embers; subject to every passing word and thought of our own or other people's, mostly other people's. Dorothy Whipple
3
It matters to ourselves, of course, but it matters terribly to other people. Moral failure or spiritual failure or whatever you call it, makes such a vicious circle.. It seems as if when we love people and they fall short, we retaliate by falling shorter ourselves. Children are like that. Adults have a fearful responsibility. When they fail to live up to what children expect of them, the children give up themselves. So each generation keeps failing the next. . Dorothy Whipple