The individual has to learn to accept his human role. When an adult pettishly protests that he didn’t ask to be born, he overlooks the simple fact that nobody else did either. Those whose services he commands had as little to say about being born as he himself had. By his standard, therefore, they have as much right as he to ask that the world wait upon them – the only hitch being that the people upon whom the world would have to depend are also people who did not ask to be born. | |
To mature, in brief, is progressively to accept the fact that the human experience is a shared experience; the human predicament, a shared predicament. A person remains immature, whatever his age, as long as he thinks of himself as an exception to the human race. | |
— Earl F. Wood, M.A. | |
From his book: “Senior English Review Exercises“ | |
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On This Day In: | |
2022 | 2021 Tree And Ornaments |
2021 | 2020 Tree And Ornaments |
My Bag | |
2020 | Still Looking |
2019 | Too True |
2018 | Simon Says |
2017 | Next Cell |
2016 | Important Knowledge |
2015 | Are You Still The Exception? |
2014 | In Answer |
Days Are Passing | |
2013 | Opportunity |
2012 | Appropriate Qualities |
2011 | A Place To Hang My Hat |
Archive for January 3rd, 2015
Are You Still The Exception?
Posted in My Journal, Quotes, tagged Earl F. Wood, My Journal, On Maturity, On The Human Experience, On The Human Predicament, Quotes, Senior English Review Exercises on January 3, 2015| 2 Comments »