Jo Coudert Quotes

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  • Examining love is like examining a stocking: if you hold it up to the light and stretch it to search for snags, any snags there are may well run and ruin the stocking. In fact, if I may fashion Coudert's law from Heisenberg's principle of indeterminacy, it is this: Love is not only changed by observation; it is changed for the worse.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.156, iUniverse
  • There is no way of steering successfully between a failed situation and a failed self except by stopping and taking our bearings.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.70, iUniverse
  • What nonsense it is, this desire to be without limitations, this wish always to be seen in the most flattering light. We are anxious, not because we think so little of ourselves, but because we think so much of ourselves. We are anxious, not that we may appear in the worst light, but that we may not appear in the best light. Anxiety is born of self-consciousness, and it is alleviated to the exact extent that we can drop consciousness of the self.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.144, iUniverse
  • The divorced person is like a man with a black patch over one eye: he looks rather dashing but the fact is that he has been through a maiming experience.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.212, iUniverse
  • You do not need to be loved, not at the cost of yourself. Of all the people you will know in the lifetime, you are the only one you will never leave or lose.

  • I saw one of the absolute truths of this world: each person is worrying about himself; no one is worrying about you. He or she is worrying about whether you like him, not whether he likes you. He is worrying about whether he looks prepossessing, not whether you are dressed correctly. He is worrying about whether he appears poised, not whether you are. He is worrying about whether you think well of him, not whether he thinks well of you. The way to be yourself ... is to forget yourself.

  • The person who conveys, 'I am nothing. Make me something,' may all his life have people trying to answer his hidden plea, but their answer will be in terms of, 'I am trying to make you something because you are nothing,' and, thus, the insult will be embedded in the response. It will be heard just as clearly as the attempt to help. And it will be hated.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.134, iUniverse
  • cookbooks, I found, are intended for people with time to cook - and, surprisingly often, for people who already know how to cook.

  • Most people ask of their friends that they understand them, but, on balance, I think I prefer a friend who understands himself.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.257, iUniverse
  • If a man has a sense of identity that does not depend on being shored up by someone else, it cannot be eroded by someone else. If a woman has a sense of identity that does not depend on finding that identity in someone else, she cannot lose her identity in someone else. And so we return to the central fact: it is necessary to be.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.177, iUniverse
  • It is characteristic to believe that those in need are given to, that the squeaky hinge is the one that gets the oil, but in the realm of emotions this is not so. It is the person who does not solicit liking and love, admiration and respect, sympathy and empathy to whom they are freely given.

    Respect   Believe   Oil  
    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.134, iUniverse
  • Hardening of the hearteries is the most serious affliction besetting marriage, and warm, good-humored, approving words are the only effective preventive.

  • If you defy the system long enough you'll be rewarded. At first life takes revenge and reduces you to a sniveling mess. But keep sniveling, have the madness, the audacity, to do what interests you, forget about your pension, and eventually life will say all right, we'll let you do it.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.265, iUniverse
  • It takes an enormous amount of energy, creative energy withdrawn from the total economy of the person, to hold a trait underground, and, unfortunately, needs and drives do not go underground alone; they carry with them useful parts of the personality, depriving it of richness and the possibility of a variety of response.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.15, iUniverse
  • Almost anything can be stretched to serve more people by being added to a white sauce or canned gravy or undiluted or very slightly diluted canned soup and served over noodles or rice. With chops or chocolate eclairs, however, the only solution is to claim you don't like them.

  • Men fear being used; women fear being used up.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.170, iUniverse
  • One does not marry to become a judge of the spouse's behavior. If a marriage license is mistaken for a hunting license and disapproval, punishment, and threat of withdrawal of love are employed as weapons, all one bags is one's own unhappiness.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.197, iUniverse
  • In order to plan your future wisely, it is necessary that you understand and appreciate your past.

  • It is possible to ruin a chicken in the cooking of it, but not easily. Short of burning it or letting it get dried out, you can hardly go wrong.

  • At what age should one marry? As a rule of thumb, perhaps not until you are past the age of feeling strongly that you must marry.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.209, iUniverse
  • The more deeply the path is etched, the more it is used, and the more it is used, the more deeply it etched.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.29, iUniverse
  • Operating in an unlit world, the unconscious mind is a brilliant detective.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.30, iUniverse
  • Every life is a dilemma that must be solved by the person living it.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.267, iUniverse
  • We can win the struggle to avoid responsibility for our personal lives, but if we do, what we lose is our lives.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.118, iUniverse
  • It is one of those quirks of human nature that you love the person whom you treat well, not necessarily the person who treats you well.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.187, iUniverse
  • The people trying to change others can conveniently be termed the angry, while the people trying to change themselves might be called the guilty, although it would be just as descriptive to speak of the controlling and the dependent, or the paranoid and the repressive, or, inelegantly, the screamers and the criers. In some circles, attaching labels to people rates only a little higher than chicken stealing, because ... a label immediately ends attempts to understand the individual.

    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.109, iUniverse
  • The unlived life is not worth examining. ... Self-awareness, self-examination, self-consciousness are for the quiet moments. In the arena they are paralyzing. The self must not be held out of the arena until living skills have been learned.

  • The cruelest affront is treating the person as exactly the person he is. We all long to be understood, but not for what we are. We long to be understood for what we might have been had all been for the best in the best of all possible worlds and, at the same time, to be forgiven for what we are.

  • A cruel joke has been played on us. We are fated always to remember what we learned but never to recall the experiences that taught us. Who can remember being born? Yet, it is possible to speculate that anxiety has its roots in this experience, that dread of abandonment, fears of separation, intolerable loneliness go back to this moment. Who can remember being cared for as an infant? ... Who can remember being toilet-trained? ... Who can remember the attachment which developed to the parent of the opposite sex? ... We cannot remember but what we have forgotten lives on dynamically.

  • It is rewarding to find someone you like, but it is essential to like yourself. It is quickening to recognize that someone is a good and decent human being, but it is indispensable to view yourself as acceptable. It is a delight to discover people who are worthy of respect and admiration and love, but it is vital to believe yourself deserving of these things.

    Believe  
    Jo Coudert (2003). “Advice from a Failure”, p.131, iUniverse
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    Jo Coudert quotes about: Cooking