— Andrew Murray
“Psychology is not just the study of weakness and damage; it is also the study of strength and virtue. Treatment is not just fixing what is broken; it is nurturing what is best within us.”
— Martin Seligman (via fyp-psychology)
O beloved God, how many grievances weaken my heart, how little means I have to handle them on my own. I lay my burdens before You, and complain of my ache to You alone, for my desire is for You and You alone. — Imam Husayn (a)
Thankfully, it is God’s grip on me—not my feeble grip on Him—that keeps me safe in the fold of His love.
— Diana Stone
wheres that quote from a letter melville wrote to hawthrone that always manages to makes me insane
found it
“When I looked up through the web of trees, the night fell over me, and for a moment I lost my boundaries, feeling like the sky was my own skin and the moon was my heart beating up there in the dark.”
— The Secret Life of Bees
“Psychology is not just the study of weakness and damage; it is also the study of strength and virtue. Treatment is not just fixing what is broken; it is nurturing what is best within us.”
— Martin Seligman (via fyp-psychology)
“Psychology is not just the study of weakness and damage; it is also the study of strength and virtue. Treatment is not just fixing what is broken; it is nurturing what is best within us.”
— Martin Seligman (via fyp-psychology)
“It is You alone before Whom the darkness of night has prostrated, so has the light of day, the brightness of moon, the radiance of sun, the rustling of trees, and the murmur of water.”
— Dua of Prophet Muhammad (saws), al-Khisal (via yaseeneducation)
To Know By Experience, 1973.
Angelus Silesius, The Cherubinic Wanderer
from Secrets of Divine Love by A. Helwa
Charlotte Brontë, from Villette
“Two individuals who are quiet to the same degree have no need to talk about the melody that defines their hours. This melody is what they have in common in and of itself. Like a burning altar it exists between them, and they nourish the sacred flame respectfully with their occasional syllables.”
— Rainer Maria Rilke, from “On Love,” The Poet’s Guide to Life: The Wisdom of Rilke, ed. and trans. Ulrich Baer (Modern Library, 2005)
“A kind deed you do for a person is kindness done towards yourself, and with which you decorate your own honour. So, do not seek thanks from someone else for what you have done for yourself.” -Imam Ali (as)




