Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Acknowledging. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Acknowledging Quotes And Sayings by 90 Authors including Michael Brown,Deepak Chopra,Alex Grey,Ey Ramos,Alexander Mccall Smith for you to enjoy and share.
A reliable indicator we have entered present moment awareness is if our experience, no matter how comfortable or uncomfortable it may feel at any given moment, is infused with gratefulness.
We must never pretend appreciation, but if we feel it, then we must express it
I acknowledge the privilege of being alive in a human body at this moment, endowed with senses, memories, emotions, thoughts, and the space of mind in its wisdom aspect.
Understanding is the first step of accepting!
Gracious acceptance is an art - an art which most never bother to cultivate. We think that we have to learn how to give, but we forget about accepting things, which can be much harder than giving ... Accepting another person's gift is allowing him to express his feelings for you.
OK, I say again, not really understanding what it is I am agreeing to, what it is precisely I am accepting. But I am accepting something. The truth of my circumstances? The reality I have until now avoided? It's much worse than I imagined and also somehow better.
I acknowledge that the kingdom of God is with me
To acknowledge God is to fully accept the sorrow of the human condition.
An attitude of gratitude
Apologies are the art of spiritual housekeeping. They help to put and keep our lives in order.
Today, God, help me practice the concept of acceptance in my life. Help me accept myself, others, and my circumstances. Take me one step further, and help me feel grateful.
Guilt is non-acceptance. Repentance is acceptance.
There is not a more pleasing exercise of the mind than gratitude. It is accompanied with such an inward satisfaction that the duty is sufficiently rewarded by the performance
If ingratitude be numbered among the serious sins, then gratitude takes its place among the noblest of virtues.
To acknowledge you were wrong yesterday is simply to let the world know that you are wiser today than you were then.
Many people spend their entire lifetimes wishing that other people would acknowledge them. They feel this especially about their parents, spouses, children, and friends.
I'm clever, I know it, and why shouldn't I acknowledge it?' While
What you consciously affirm, you must not mentally deny a few moments later.
The grateful person, being still the most severe exacter of himself, not only confesses, but proclaims, his debts.
Acceptance means: For now, this is what this situation, this moment, requires me to do, and so I do it willingly.
Acceptance is an art that must be mastered if we want to keep our friends for the span of life that remains to us, and presently step off the stage with our self-respect intact.
Our receiving expands with our gratitude.
Acceptance does not mean inaction; acceptance is actually acknowledging the present situation.
Understanding leads to acceptance.
Pause your opinions, debating and absolute knowing for long enough to conceive gratitude.
A sincere apology is analogous to authentic repentance".
~R. Alan Woods [2013]
Not seeking acknowledgment for things done well but finding satisfaction in doing them well.
It is not for us to hold ourselves above the position of grateful people. We have to be able to accept. Anything else shows an unwillingness to grant someone else the superior place.
As I express my gratitude, I become more deeply aware of it. And the greater my awareness, the greater my need to express it. What happens here is a spiraling ascent, a process of growth in ever expanding circles around a steady center.
Apologizing with grace
There comes a day that we become tired of hearing empty promises and insincere apologies; not just from others, but also from ourselves.
Acceptance does not mean that you placidly acquiesce to the myriad injustices that are all around you. In fact, that you are incensed about these injustices is the very reason you need to try your level best to 'right' these 'wrongs.'
Acceptance is the spiritual hammock.
Gratitude is like credit; it is the backbone of our relations; frequently we pay our debts not because equity demands that we should, but to facilitate future loans.
In this life, when you deny someone an apology,
you will remember it at time you beg forgiveness.
Recognition is what you feel when a friend sums up exactly what you're feeling, when an author gives you the right words, when someone "gets" you.
Acceptance is appreciation, and the high value of appreciation is such that to appreciate appreciation seems to be the fundamental prerequisite for survival. Mankind will not die for lack of information; it may perish for lack of appreciation.
to accept something you have to admit the part you played or you simply play the part of victim.
ACCEPTATION (ACCEPTA'TION) n.s.[from accept.]1. Reception, whether good or bad. This large sense seems now wholly out of use.
Acceptance is to love and embrace everything that we find within ourselves like a mother embraces her child.
You must accept responsibility for your actions, but not the credit for your achievements.
Gratitude is an astoundingly reliable, immediate way of becoming present.
Help us to forgive ourselves as we struggle in our process of forgiving others."
~R. Alan Woods [2013]
Like most readers, I tend to skip the acknowledgements at the beginnings of books: the 'To-My-Wife-Without-Whose-Invaluable-Assistance' kind of thing.
This wonderful gray of acceptance resides between the extremes of black and white thinking; looking for serenity, explore the gray. Part of that acceptance is understanding that life is hard and involves life and death. Part of that acceptance is that I am responsible for my actions.
I cannot accept merely ... I do not do anything merely.
Gratitude is a joyful act.
Ellie fought the urge to stamp her foot. "I meant it this time. Do you accept my apology?"
"It appears," he said, raising his eyebrows, "that you might do me bodily harm if I do not."
"Ungracious prig," she muttered. "I am trying to apologize."
"And I," he said, "am trying to accept.
By appreciation, we make excellence in others our own property.
It is an interesting paradox that the more you surrender the credit for something you've done, the more memorable you become, and the more you actually end up receiving credit.
accepted stoically, without fear or self-pity or hope for anything
Gratitude is the spirit of graceful sacred-existence.
It is gracious to overlook an offence.
I don't think anyone ever feels acknowledged enough.
I am saying to acknowledge the "power within you" that transforms our every thought into experience.
Ingratitude produces pride while gratitude produces humility.
By accepting responsibility, we take effective steps toward our goal: an inclusive human society on a habitable planet, a society that works for all humans and for all nonhumans. By accepting responsibility, we move closer to creating a world that works for all.
I'm going to admit when I'm clueless, and I'm going to ask people for help when I don't know the answer to something.
I am here to accept responsibility for that which I did. I will not accept responsibility for that which I did not do.
Giving credit where credit is due is a very rewarding habit to form. Its rewards are inestimable.
Begging for acknowledgment, or even asking, diminishes dignity and diminishes power.
When I accept an apology it means that the part in me that honors our relationship honors the part in you that honors our relationship.
Extending gratitude to another says, I see what you've done and I thank you for the energy you put forth.
Blame anchors us into the past; a place we cannot change. Acceptance frees us to the future.
When you want to be honored by others, you learn to honor them first.
Acceptance in the mindful context means that even when the unthinkable happens, we honor our self and our experience with dignity and kindness. Rather than turn our back on our own suffering, we treat ourselves as we would a beloved friend.
In forgiving an injury be somewhat ceremonious, lest your magnanimity be construed as indifference.
It is unpleasant and disturbing to be rejected. It is deeply satisfying to be accepted.
An honor is not diminished for being shared.
Don't worry when you are not recognized but strive to be worthy of recognition
Real humility is not about denying the gifts you are offered; it is accepting them.
Acknowledging what you don't know is the dawning of wisdom.
The habit of saying thank you is the mark of a cultivated mind.
When we don't get acknowledgment or feel that we are giving more than we are getting out of conversations or feel talked down to, we become anxious, disrespected, and humiliated. Humble
Recognition is a fire ; you can burn or find warmth and comfort by it.
He who thinks and thinks for himself, will always have a claim to thanks; it is no matter whether it be right or wrong, so as it be explicit. If it is right, it will serve as a guide to direct; if wrong, as a beacon to warn.
Gratitude is the most exquisite form of courtesy.
Acknowledge the elegance of simplicity.
Repentance is accepted remorse.
To acknowledge that I am yet a sinner is not to deny that I am a saint but to acknowledge how I became one, by grace.
One grows accustomed to being praised, or being blamed, or being advised, but it is unusual to be understood.
We acknowledge God only when we are conscious of His manifestation in us.
Gratitude is peace.
Words often spoil a moment of judgment or excitement; in all great puzzles and wars and movements, there is a moment to speak and a moment to accept with silent dignity.
Gratitude
is a sacred space where you allow and know that a force greater than
your ego is always at work and always available.
It is up to us to give ourselves recognition. If we wait for it to come from others, we feel resentful when it doesn't, and when it does, we may well reject it.
Gratitude is a soul blooming profusely!
Acceptance is going to a restaurant where the salad's not great, but the steak is fine.
When people thank you for doing something, you begin to realize how truly blessed you were to have been put in that position.
Yeah. I mean, acknowledging is easy. Something happened or it didn't. But understanding ... that's where things get sticky.
Emit gratitude as though it was done
Appreciation is the legal tender that all souls enjoy.
An affirmation opens the door. It's a beginning point on the path to change.
Gratitude is like the good faith of traders: it maintains commerce, and we often pay, not because it is just to discharge our debts, but that we may more readily find people to trust us.
Acknowledge the good around you and the simplicity it takes to recognise it
Acknowledging that sometimes, often at very crucial times, you really have no idea where you are going or even where the path lies. A the same time, you can very well know something about where you are now (even if it is knowing that you are lost, confused, enraged or without hope).
Acknowledge people, not their jobs.
Apologies have more power than most of us realize to restore strained relationships, free us from vengeful impulses, and create possibilities for growth.
Forgiveness is a practiced and fervrent process".
~R. Alan Woods [2012]
Acceptance is the act of embracing what life presents to you with a good attitude.