Frustration In Life Quotes by Samuel Ullman, David Abrahamsen, Robert E. Sherwood, Dale Carnegie, Sam Ewing, Pope John XXIII and many others.

Maturity is the ability to think, speak and act your feelings within the bounds of dignity. The measure of your maturity is how spiritual you become during the midst of your frustrations.
Frustration is the wet nurse of violence.
That’s the whole story of my life: frustration. It’s a chronic disease, and it’s incurable.
Our fatigue is often caused not by work, but by worry, frustration and resentment.
Nothing is as frustrating as arguing with someone who knows what he’s talking about.
Consult not your fears but your hopes and your dreams. Think not about your frustrations, but about your unfulfilled potential. Concern yourself not with what you tried and failed in, but with what it is still possible for you to do.
Success is not built on success. It’s built on failure. It’s built on frustration. Sometimes its built on catastrophe.
I’ve come to believe that all my past failure and frustration were actually laying the foundation for the understandings that have created the new level of living I now enjoy.
Success is buried on the other side of rejection.
Consult not your fears but your hopes
and your dreams. Think not about your frustrations, but about your unfulfilled potential.
and your dreams. Think not about your frustrations, but about your unfulfilled potential.
A life of frustration is inevitable for any coach whose main enjoyment is winning.
There is no such thing as being done with an artistic life. Frustrations and rewards exist at all levels on the path.
All successful people learn that success is buried on the other side of frustration.
Transformation is my favorite game and in my experience, anger and frustration are the result of you not being authentic somewhere in your life or with someone in your life. Being fake about anything creates a block inside of you. Life can’t work for you if you don’t show up as you.
Fears, indecision, and frustration feed on words. Without words they usually stop. . . . Words are at times good for looking back, but they are confining when I need to act in the present.
People need trouble – a little frustration to sharpen the spirit on, toughen it.
The slow rhythm of the body, the insistent rhythm of the wit, were they becoming irreconcilable in modern civilisation? The sedentary life, frustration and irritability; work with the body, fatigue – and peace of mind.
Pages: 1 2