11 Quotes & Sayings By Stephen Grosz

Stephen Grosz is an author, lecturer, and professional speaker. He works with business people and entrepreneurs to inspire them to achieve their fullest potential. His first novel, The Bait, won the prestigious PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. His first nonfiction book, The Art of Asking: How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Let People Help was a finalist for the PEN/E.O Read more

Wilson Literary Science Writing Award. He has also written four bestsellers on leadership and personal growth, including The Aware Leader , The Aware Leader's Companion , Beyond Survival , and The Aware Leader's Companion .

A lot of people, especially psychoanalysts, assume that happiness can...
1
A lot of people, especially psychoanalysts, assume that happiness can only be found in a couple - but not all of us are made for a relationship. Stephen Grosz
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We all try to silence painful emotions. but when we succeed in feeling nothing we lose the only means we have of knowing what hurts us and why. Stephen Grosz
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The bigger the front, the bigger the back. Stephen Grosz
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For a minute, the fantasy frightened her, but ultimately, this fear saved her from feeling alone. Stephen Grosz
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As he spoke, I had the mental image of a small boy switching on the nightlight, not because he wants to be able to find his parents during the night, but because he fears his parents will forget him - lose him - in the dark. Stephen Grosz
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Pyschoanalysts are fond of pointing out that the past is alive in the present. But the future is alive in the present too. The future is not some place we're going to, but an idea in our mind now. It is something we're creating, that in turn creates us. The future is a fantasy that shapes our present. Stephen Grosz
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Being loved is the problem, because love is a demand - when you're loved, someone wants more of you. Stephen Grosz
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When I'm in a couple, I feel I'm disappearing, dying - losing my mind. Stephen Grosz
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Closure is just as delusive-it is the false hope that we can deaden our living grief. Stephen Grosz
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Being present, whether with children, with friends, or even with oneself, is hard work. But isn't this attentiveness -- the feeling that someone is trying to think about us -- something we want more than praise? Stephen Grosz