MOTIVATING TIPS

ON ON ANXIETY & QUIET DAYS

Anxiety is not a character flaw. It is a signal, often too loud, from a system trying to protect you. These quotes are for the quiet days and the loud ones.

What are the best quotes for On Anxiety & Quiet Days?

  1. 1

    The best quotes for anxiety do not tell you to think positive or push through. They sit with you in the difficulty and remind you that the feeling is temporary, even when it does not feel that way.

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Never let the future disturb you. You will meet it, if you have to, with the same weapons of reason which today arm you against the present.

Marcus Aurelius

Why This Matters

This is Aurelius at his most reassuring. The anxiety about tomorrow is always worse than tomorrow itself, because tomorrow you will have your full faculties — the same mind, the same resources, the same capacity for problem-solving that you have right now. The future version of you is not helpless. They are you, with more information.

For every minute you are angry you lose sixty seconds of happiness.

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Why This Matters

The real sting here isn't the arithmetic—it's Emerson's suggestion that anger and happiness aren't merely opposite states but *mutually exclusive currencies*, as though we're spending from a fixed account. Most people assume happiness is something we *earn* through circumstances, yet Emerson positions it as something we actively *forfeit*, making us responsible for our own depletion. When you find yourself stewing over a colleague's slight or a friend's thoughtless comment, you're not just experiencing displeasure; you're consciously withdrawing from your own reserves of contentment. The quote gains weight in quiet moments, when we realize that the hour we spent replaying an argument yesterday was an hour we might have simply *enjoyed our coffee*.

Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. In our response lies our growth and our freedom.

Viktor Frankl

Why This Matters

This may be the most important sentence in modern psychology, and its exact origin is uncertain. It is consistently attributed to Frankl and is deeply consistent with logotherapy's core premise — that humans always retain the freedom to choose their attitude, even in the most constrained circumstances. Whether or not Frankl wrote these exact words, they distil his life's work into a single actionable insight: pause before you react.

You wouldn't worry so much about what others think of you if you realised how seldom they do.

Eleanor Roosevelt

Why This Matters

What Eleanor Roosevelt captures here is the peculiar mathematics of self-consciousness: we construct elaborate narratives about how much mental real estate we occupy in other people's minds, when in truth most people are too preoccupied with their own concerns to maintain much of a running commentary on us. The real sting isn't that people judge us harshly—it's that they're mostly not thinking of us at all. Consider how you remember a colleague's awkward comment from three years ago while they've entirely forgotten saying it; now multiply that asymmetry across every social interaction you've ever had, and you glimpse the liberation she's pointing toward. She's not suggesting we abandon self-reflection, but rather that we've wildly overestimated the size of our audience.

Worry does not empty tomorrow of its sorrow, it empties today of its strength.

Corrie ten Boom

Why This Matters

Corrie ten Boom wrote from the vantage of a concentration camp survivor, which gives her observation teeth that self-help platitudes lack—she knew that worry isn't merely unproductive but actively *hostile*, a thief working in real time rather than a harmless habit. Most people understand that fretting won't change tomorrow, but she captures something sharper: the arithmetic of suffering, where you pay today's currency for tomorrow's problem that may never arrive. When you catch yourself rehearsing a difficult conversation at 3 a.m., you're not borrowing trouble from the future; you're spending the vitality you'll actually need to *face* that conversation when it comes.

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On Anxiety & Quiet Days Quotes. (n.d.). MotivatingTips. Retrieved June 17, 2026, from https://www.motivatingtips.com/topics/anxiety

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On Anxiety & Quiet Days Quotes. MotivatingTips, DSS Media, 2026. https://www.motivatingtips.com/topics/anxiety, accessed June 17, 2026.

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"On Anxiety & Quiet Days Quotes." MotivatingTips. DSS Media, 2026. 17 June 2026. https://www.motivatingtips.com/topics/anxiety