15 Quotes & Sayings By Mary Catherine Bateson

Mary Catherine Bateson received her doctorate from Columbia University. Bateson is a social psychologist, anthropologist, and a senior fellow of the Society for the Study of Social Problems. Her work focuses on how knowledge is created and used in communities and cultures, including the work of shamans. Bateson has published over 300 articles and eight books, including The Sacred Hoop: Recovering the Feminine in American Indian Traditions (with Mary Catherine Bateson) and The Scandal of Motherhood: An Investigation of Fertility which explores the connections between the individual, community, and larger society.

1
An encounter with other cultures can lead to openness only if you can suspend the assumption of superiority, not seeing new worlds to conquer, but new worlds to respect. Mary Catherine Bateson
2
Real winners in a rapidly changing world will be those who are open to alternatives and able to respect and value those who are different. Mary Catherine Bateson
3
The critical question about regret is whether experience led to growth and new learning. Some people seem to keep on making the same mistakes, while others at least make new ones. Regret and remorse can be either paralyzing or inspiring. [p. 199] Mary Catherine Bateson
4
... as we age we have not only to readdress earlier developmental crises but also somehow to find the way to three affirmations that may seem to conflict.... We have to affirm our own life. We have to affirm our own death. And we have to affirm love, both given and received. [p. 88] Mary Catherine Bateson
5
Since few people arrive at retirement with an understanding that this transition will involve a rethinking of who they are, an interim pattern has emerged, in which travel offers a way of fulfilling deferred daydreams of adventure while the next stage takes shape. [p. 31] Mary Catherine Bateson
6
It's all about being in control of myself as an older woman who lives alone, and it's all about how I am going to do what I have to do to be as strong as I can be and be confident that I can do what I need to do as an older person. [p. 62] Mary Catherine Bateson
7
Moving is both liberating and debilitating. Undertaken too late, it is a very stressful process, one that sometimes seems to catapult people into frail old age, and undertaken too soon, it may preempt other possibilities. [p. 38] Mary Catherine Bateson
8
Sorting gets harder as time goes on--it requires a sort of ruthless decisiveness, while indecision results in endless dithering. Five moves, they say, equal a fire. But those who haven't moved may begin to need a fire. [p. 38] Mary Catherine Bateson
9
After all, most of us have lived lives based on commitments made without any way of knowing where they would lead. The uncertainty is an essential element in commitment, the acceptance of consequences an essential element in fidelity. [p. 80] Mary Catherine Bateson
10
As people grow older, some of the ways they have contributed in the past may no longer be possible, but the challenge to society is not only to provide help and care where these are needed but also to offer the opportunity to contribute and care for others [p. 8] Mary Catherine Bateson
11
Worlds can be found by a child and an adult bending down and looking together under the grass stems or at the skittering crabs in a tidal pool. Mary Catherine Bateson
12
The timing of death, like the ending of a story, gives a changed meaning to what preceded it. Mary Catherine Bateson
13
The family is changing, not disappearing. We have to broaden our understanding of it, look for the new metaphors. Mary Catherine Bateson
14
Human beings do not eat nutrients, they eat food. Mary Catherine Bateson