Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Hostility. 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 Hostility Quotes And Sayings by 96 Authors including Ed Roland,Kelly Mcgillis,Sharon Gannon,Vanessa Diffenbaugh,Mike Tyson for you to enjoy and share.
Question your answers, Truth has no anger
For a long time I thought I could deal with my anger and hostility on my own. But I couldn't. I denied that it had affected me, and yet I was so frantic on the inside with other people: I needed to be constantly reassured.
When you feel destructive, negative emotions like hate and anger arise within you towards the person opposing you; cultivate the opposite state of mind.
Hate can be passionate or disengaged; it can come from dislike but also from fear.
Anger is my biggest enemy in life.
ANIMOSITY (ANIMO'SITY) n.s.[animositas, Lat.]Vehemence of hatred; passionate malignity. It implies rather the disposition to break out into outrages, than the outrage itself. They were sure to bring passion,
Malice and hatred are very fretting and vexatious, and apt to make our minds sore and uneasy; but he that can moderate these affections will find ease in his mind.
Incivility is the extreme of pride; it is built on the contempt of mankind.
Fear is as dangerous an enemy as resentment.
Anger or hate can be a useful motivating force
Confrontation is better than malice.
Hatred or happiness. Could I be happy? Did I even fucking deserve it? I knew the answer to that one but it didn't stop me wondering, and hoping. "It's
An insult angers me. Being ignored crushes me.
Passionate hatred can give meaning and purpose to an empty life.' Eric Hoffer
Resentment seems to have been given us by nature for a defense, and for a defense only! It is the safeguard of justice and the security of innocence.
Hate smolders and eventually destroys, not the hated but the hater.
There is something in meanness which excites a species of resentment that never subsides, and something in cruelty which stirs up the heart to the highest agony of human hatred.
When people are angry, any insult will do; and prejudice is magnified into a cause.
Anger is an integrity-producing response to the invasion of your personal boundaries.
Reject hatred without hating.
Angry people may appear strong, willful, or certain, but be assured that beneath the veneer are fear and loneliness and insecurity and pain. Especially, there is pain.
Hatred is one of the poisons; like jaundice, it alters the true colors of things.
There it was again - the perverse refusal to acknowledge my hostility. She seemed to me like some magical lake in a fairy tale: nothing could disturb the mirror-calm of her surface. My snide comments and bitter jokes disappeared soundlessly into her depths, leaving not so much as a ripple.
Anger or hatred is like a fisherman's hook. It is very important for us to ensure that we are not caught by it.
Anger isn't the opposite of love. Hate is, and the final form of hate is indifference.[17]
Anger, pride and competence are our real enemies.
psychological reactance.
People with high but unstable self-esteem exhibit the greatest hostility.
Nothing better forges a bond of love, friendship or respect than common hatred toward something.
I get angry when people bring derisory actions against me.
Ideas that require people to reorganize their picture of the world provoke hostility.
When you run into someone who is disagreeable to others, you may be sure he is uncomfortable with himself; the amount of pain we inflict upon others is directly proportional to the amount we feel within us.
What we fear we often rage against.
Fear is the anticipation of the pain in the future. Anger is the remembrance of pain in the past. Hostility is wanting to get even.
Enmity is anger watching the opportunity for revenge.
Impotent hatred is the most horrible of all emotions; one should hate nobody whom one cannot destroy.
Thwarted lives have the most character-conditioned hate
There is no faculty of the human soul so persistent and universal as that of hatred.
Return animosity with virtue.
Those who make hostility a daily manner are often left in the lurch at difficult times.
There was no real animosity in his voice or his mind. It was the simple desire to obstruct found in everyone, and often expressed where there is no fear of retaliation.
Rash and incessant scolding runs into custom and renders itself despised.
Some persons feel drawn towards those who dislike them, or are at least determined to overcome opposition of that sort.
An intellectual hatred is the worst.
Hatred is like a plague. It is all-consuming, and it springs from man to man.
Hatred is a cold fire, and it gives no warmth.
When it comes to hating, gossiping, ignoring, ridiculing, holding grudges, or wanting to cause harm, please apply the following: Stop it!
Not everyone knows how to be silent or to leave in good time. It happens that even people of good breeding fail to notice that their presence provokes in the weary or preoccupied host a feeling akin to hatred, and that this feeling is tensely concealed and covered up with lies.
Since hate poisons the soul, don't cherish enmities or grudges: avoid people who make you unhappy.
Hatred is like a dam waiting to burst, and when it does, it is more devastating than what you had originally intended.
Hatred is blind and anger deaf: the one who pours himself a cup of vengeance is likely to drink a bitter draught.
Sometimes we hate others for the things we hate in ourselves
Resentment, bitterness, and holding a grudge prevent us from seeing and hearing and tasting and delighting.
I'm hostile to men, I'm hostile to women, I'm hostile to cats, to poor cockroaches, I'm afraid of horses.
Indifference is the strongest contempt.
Pent up anger brews into hate, which subsequently becomes a juicy revenge.
Resentment is our biggest enemy.
Resentment is the little fire that can transform and destroy the world by becoming a wildfire.
Hatred, in the course of time, kills the unhappy wretch who delights in nursing it in his bosom.
Bitterness: anger that forgot where it came from.
Passionate hatreds can give meaning and purpose to an empty life. These people haunted by the purposelessness of their lives try to find a new content not only by dedicating themselves to a holy cause but also by nursing a fanatical grievance.
Of all hostile feelings, envy is perhaps the hardest to be subdued, because hardly any one owns it even to himself, but looks out for one pretext after another to justify his hostility.
Anger fuels Hate
Hate fuels Rage
Rage fuels Vengeance
Vengeance fuels Despair
Despair fuels Hate.
Anger, hatred, and bitterness are lethal poisons. They cause a slow, painful emotional death that only you suffer. Self-destruction will never defeat an enemy or create justice.
Anger may be kindled in the noblest breasts: but in these slow droppings of an unforgiving temper never takes the shape of consistency of enduring hatred.
-hatred is like a shotgun. It's powerful and it rips apart everything in its path-good, bad or indifferent.
At the bottom of enmity between strangers lies indifference.
There are some people you just dislike, without even knowing why. You take one look at them and you just don't like them. It's not that they ever did anything to you, it's just spontaneous antipathy, pure and simple.
Hatred grows into insolence when we desire to excel the rest of mankind and imagine we do not belong to the common lot; we even severely and haughtily despise others as our inferiors.
The reason a person viciously strikes out against you is because they are afraid of you or what you represent, or are resentful of your happiness.
Is your animosity towards a person warranted, or is it a reflection of your own insecurities?
Anger and hate can make you brave, make you strong, but they also make you stupid.
Hatred is an affair of the heart; contempt that of the head.
Anger based on calculated reason is more dangerous than anger based on blind hate
We celebrate peace. Yet we pay no attention to the ways of curing aggression in human beings. And when one sees in psychoanalysis hostility disappearing as people conquer their fears, one wonders if the cure is not there.
Anger - justifiable anger in the face of oppression and prejudice - should not be mistaken for hatred.
There is a corner in every human heart made to be filled with hatred, fear, and violence. It is our common curse.
Anger and intolerance are the twin enemies of correct understanding.
Rage can easily convert to hatred. There is a wish to control the bad object in order to avoid persecution or fear. This control is achieved by the development of obsessive control mechanisms, which psychopathologically regulate the repression of aggression in such an individual.
Our anger is a product of our insecurities.
The angry man wishes the object of his anger to suffer in return; hatred wishes its object not to exist.
Every part of our personality that we do not love will become hostile to us.
The humorless puzzle of inequality and hate. His experience raised the question of worth and values, of aggressive inferiority and aggressive arrogance.
From the deepest desires often come the deadliest hate.
People misinterpret my passion for anger.
Insecurity - the basis of most negative human interaction.
Conquer with forbearance
The excesses of insolence.
What is deadlier than hate, and flows without limit?
Indifference.
Hate gets going, it goes round, it gets older and tighter and older and tighter, until it holds a person inside it like a fist holds a stick.
Anything that you resent and strongly react to in another is also in you.
Tolerance is a placid contempt.
More good things in life are lost by indifference than ever were lost by active hostility.
Righteous indignation: your own wrath as opposed to the shocking bad temper of others
Disdain is a natural condition of the mind in exile;
A loving person lives in a loving world. A hostile person lives in a hostile world.
We cannot overcome anger and hatred simply by suppressing them. We need to actively cultivate the antidotes: patience and tolerance.
Anger causes us often to condemn in one what we approve in another.
Where there is fear there is aggression.
How little imagination and courage we show in our hatreds.
REASON, n. Propensitate of prejudice.