57 Quotes About Civility

Civility is an important part of any relationship, because it’s what helps us to treat each other with respect. It’s about being polite, kind, and courteous to everyone you meet. We may not always get it right, but that doesn’t mean we should stop trying. These civility quotes are here to help us remember the importance of treating others the way we wish to be treated.

Words were insufficient for the elevation of his [Mr Collins']...
1
Words were insufficient for the elevation of his [Mr Collins'] feelings; and he was obliged to walk about the room, while Elizabeth tried to unite civility and truth in a few short sentences. Jane Austen
When you know you can do something, and you feel...
2
When you know you can do something, and you feel good about yourself, you do not have to devalue others. John Patrick Hickey
3
Be a person that others will look for your posts daily because they know you will encourage them. Be the positive one and help others to have a great day and you will find that not only they like you but you will like you too. John Patrick Hickey
Leaving the group, he reclined on a couch, drank morosely,...
4
Leaving the group, he reclined on a couch, drank morosely, and watched people. He noticed the games they played with one another. They put on masks of civility, all while spewing their venom. Francine Rivers
When civility is illusory, war is inevitable.
5
When civility is illusory, war is inevitable. Steve Maraboli
To work best democracy needs a diversity of thoughts, ideas...
6
To work best democracy needs a diversity of thoughts, ideas and expression. This is only possible with freedom and civility. Kevin Stirtz
7
I am worn out with civility. I have been talking incessantly all night, and with nothing to say. But with you there may be peace. You will not want to be talked to. Let us have the luxury of silence. Jane Austen
8
. the authors had developed indices that could be employed to measure the state of a civilization, to determine if society was healthy, in decline, or perhaps even dead. The indicators keyed in on everything from the accumulation of refuse to declines in everyday civility. They looked at how a society treated its most vulnerable citizens; examined a culture's architecture, gauging its scale in relation to humans and the surrounding natural world. One of the primary indicators, however, was a measure of the ability of a society's citizens to listen to each other and truly hear what was being said. It evaluated by gradations the ability of individuals to stand motionless for prolonged periods, receptive to their surroundings. . Robert H. Lieberman
9
Words have meaning beyond the obvious. Words have consequences beyond intentions. Civil words align risk and reward of such unknowns. Unknown
10
Wisdom tells us that the best time for silence is when we are mad or upset. John Patrick Hickey
11
As a success-minded person, you should always be looking to not only do your job but do it with excellence and go the extra mile. John Patrick Hickey
12
Let your heroes be known. Give praise and honor to those to whom it is rightly due. Spend more time posting stories about heroes than you do about the wrongs in the world. When we know about heroes and we see those who perform heroic acts, we too want to be heroes. There is a hero in all of us. Heroes are important. John Patrick Hickey
13
Success-minded people must understand that the use of profane and obscene words have no place in their vocabulary. John Patrick Hickey
14
No matter who it is or what you think of them, never rejoice in the pain of others. It lowers you to a level you should not be at. John Patrick Hickey
15
We are all different and we all have a different sense of humor. John Patrick Hickey
16
Keep the personal, personal and do not be guilty of spreading bad feelings. John Patrick Hickey
17
Trustworthiness is a mark of a success-minded person. To be seen as trustworthy is a great compliment. When people trust you, they expect that you will honor their trust. John Patrick Hickey
18
Not everyone will support every mission or work, you can still enjoy their friendship. No one likes to feel that the only reason you are friends is what you can get out of them. John Patrick Hickey
19
If you want friends you must be friendly. Always complaining and posting negative comments is not going to bring you friends. No one likes to get puked on. John Patrick Hickey
20
Gossip has always been a problem. It is one of the most powerful, addictive behaviors there is. As long as the human race has had a common language they have used it to gossip. John Patrick Hickey
21
Remember that people who seek to do evil can play hit and miss all they want. People who are seeking companionship online have to be right every time. Miss out on this one and the price could be very dear, even costing your life. John Patrick Hickey
22
By no means do I think that playing games online is wrong or rude. However, constantly sending requests is an act of bad manners as well as being very annoying to the one receiving them. John Patrick Hickey
23
It is rudeness of the highest order to hit a family when they are down. John Patrick Hickey
24
Remember this, posting pictures are like speaking words, you cannot take them back. John Patrick Hickey
25
If you are going to share something with a person, first look on their social media accounts and see how they have handled other people trust. If someone has shared the secrets of others, they will share yours. John Patrick Hickey
26
Okay, I cannot say this without being very direct. If you are looking for a spouse or even a romance through social media, you are looking for trouble. John Patrick Hickey
27
Posting something that is encouraging and well done compared to something that is trashy and common is the difference between eating a fine meal or the scraps from making that meal. John Patrick Hickey
28
Be a blessing to all you are connecting with on social media. Encourage, rejoice and celebrate with each and every one. You will find that it will do wonders for your own attitude as well as those who may struggle with a negative mind-set. John Patrick Hickey
29
Success-minded people know that first and foremost, in all we do, we must think of others first. By thinking of others, how they feel and what they need, will not cost you a thing nor will it lessen what you have to say. John Patrick Hickey
30
Positive people on the other had are not those who deny what is going on around them for some pie-in-the-sky type of thinking. Positive people are very award of the problems, disasters and difficulties that are happening all around them. What they do not do is give into defeat. John Patrick Hickey
31
If someone is trying to share a laugh and you personally do not find it funny, then just move on and leave it alone. Do not steal someone else’s humor. John Patrick Hickey
32
Heroes show us courage, honor, integrity and strength. Now more than ever, we need heroes. John Patrick Hickey
33
We have gotten so use to humor being something nasty and offensive that we started to believe that was the only way to get a laugh. John Patrick Hickey
34
To be truly grateful for the kindness of other and to have those you love in your life is a great and powerful emotion. John Patrick Hickey
35
The rules from those who are politically correct restrict what you can say to or about anything in our daily life. They tell you what to call others and what others can call you. John Patrick Hickey
36
It is not the job for those who are angry about the events of the day to strike out and post things that they hope will incite anger in others as well. Do not sell your social media friends short as far as their ability to find the news for themselves. John Patrick Hickey
37
Every decision you ever make has its own consequences. Freedom is not the issue. You have freedom to do what you want, you just cannot do it and not pay the price for it. John Patrick Hickey
38
Good manners is just being respectful of others. Whether you know them or not, you should show respect for all people. John Patrick Hickey
39
Everything has a consequence to it. John Patrick Hickey
40
Posting your thoughts on any social media site is like telling you most deeply held secret to the town gossip. Not a wise move. John Patrick Hickey
41
We watch death and destruction on TV, in movies, over the news and online so much that it is just a part of our lives. It was never meant to be that way. In the end, we have paid a heavy price for our curiosity. John Patrick Hickey
42
Social media is just that - social. John Patrick Hickey
43
It seems that the days of public modesty and concern about how we look are far from us. I will not say they are gone forever, in culture nothing is forever. John Patrick Hickey
44
I believe that when a person has hope in the future, believe in their ability to achieve and understand that God made them for a purpose, then they will, in the end, and achieve great things. John Patrick Hickey
45
When had I tamed myself? It had been a lengthy apprenticeship, begun when I was as young as ten, and continued relentlessly throughout my adolescence, when I had discovered to my own terror that I wanted to murder somebody: my father, a sarcastic friend, my professor of Latin and Greek, even a rude passerby. It was not until I was almost twenty that I began to suspect that, along with the repression of my violent impulses, I had repressed everything, even my ability to experience a profound emotion, even my impulse to do good deeds and help others. I had become as good as I had hoped to be, but good with the cautious detachment of one who never indulges in excess. Domenico Starnone
46
Aspire to decency. Practice civility toward one another. Admire and emulate ethical behavior wherever you find it. Apply a rigid standard of morality to your lives; and if, periodically, you fail ­ as you surely will ­ adjust your lives, not the standards. Ted Koppel
47
People who cannot restrain their own baser instincts, who cannot treat one another with civility, are not capable of self-government... without virtue, a society can be ruled only by fear, a truth that tyrants understand all too well Charles W. Colson
48
Be civilized. Grudges are for Neanderthals. — Hubert Humphrey David Pietrusza
49
He accomplished wonders of diplomacy on the principle, never give way, and never give offense. Barbara W. Tuchman
50
The system wears a mask of civility, yet will quickly reveal its true nature in the form of magnificently-purposed violence when needed. Bryant McGill
51
It is not enough just to be good. We must be good for something. We must contribute good to the world. The world must be a better place for our presence. And the good that is in us must be spread to others. This is the measure of our civility. Gordon B. Hinckley
52
Democracy is the worst insult to any society that is increasingly secular and growing in incivility for there it is more abused than used. Newton G Kibiringi
53
If the secret core of potlatch is the reciprocity of exchange, why is this reciprocity not asserted directly, why does it assume the “mystified” form of two consecutive acts each of which is staged as a free voluntary display of generosity? Here we encounter the paradoxes of forced choice, of freedom to do what is necessary, at its most elementary: I have to do freely what I am expected to do. (If, upon receiving a gift, I immediately return it to the giver, this direct circulation would amount to an extremely aggressive gesture of humiliation, it would signal that I refused the other’s gifts – recall those embarrassing moments when elderly people forget and give us last year’s present once again … ) …the reciprocity of exchange is in itself thoroughly ambiguous; at its most fundamental, it is destructive of the social bond, it is the logic of revenge, tit for tat. To cover this aspect of exchange, to make it benevolent and pacific, one has to pretend that each person’s gift is free and stands on its own. This brings us to potlatch as the “pre-economy of the economy, ” its zero-level, that is, exchange as the reciprocal relation of two non-productive expenditures. If the gift belongs to Master and exchange to the Servant, potlatch is the paradoxical exchange between Masters. Potlach is simultaneously the zero-level of civility, the paradoxical point at which restrained civility and obscene consumption overlap, the point at which it is polite to behave impolitely. Unknown
54
Virtue became less the harsh and martial self-sacrifice of antiquity and more the modern willingness to get along with others for the sake of peace and prosperity. Gordon S. Wood
55
Teaching civility is an obligation of the family. Stephen Carter
56
The civility which money will purchase, is rarely extended to those who have none. Charles Dickens