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Created page with " ==Quotes== "I have learned that in any significant or continuing relationship, persistent feelings had best be expressed. If they are expressed as feelings, owned by me, the result may be temporarily upsetting but ultimately far more rewarding than any attempt to deny or conceal them."<ref>Rogers, Carl. ''A Way of Being''. Houghton Mifflin, 1980.</ref>"
 
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"I have learned that in any significant or continuing relationship, persistent feelings had best be expressed. If they are expressed as feelings, owned by me, the result may be temporarily upsetting but ultimately far more rewarding than any attempt to deny or conceal them."<ref>Rogers, Carl. ''A Way of Being''. Houghton Mifflin, 1980.</ref>
 
"I have learned that in any significant or continuing relationship, persistent feelings had best be expressed. If they are expressed as feelings, owned by me, the result may be temporarily upsetting but ultimately far more rewarding than any attempt to deny or conceal them....
 
For me, being transparently open is far more rewarding than being defensive. This is difficult to achieve, even partially, but enormously enriching to a relationship.
 
It is necessary for me to stay close to the earthiness of real experience. I cannot live my life in abstractions. So real relationships with persons, hands dirtied in the soil, observing the budding of a flower, or viewing the sunset,are necessary to my life. At least one foot must be in the soil of reality."<ref>Rogers, Carl. ''A Way of Being''. Houghton Mifflin, 1980.</ref>

Latest revision as of 13:49, 17 December 2025


Quotes

"I have learned that in any significant or continuing relationship, persistent feelings had best be expressed. If they are expressed as feelings, owned by me, the result may be temporarily upsetting but ultimately far more rewarding than any attempt to deny or conceal them....

For me, being transparently open is far more rewarding than being defensive. This is difficult to achieve, even partially, but enormously enriching to a relationship.

It is necessary for me to stay close to the earthiness of real experience. I cannot live my life in abstractions. So real relationships with persons, hands dirtied in the soil, observing the budding of a flower, or viewing the sunset,are necessary to my life. At least one foot must be in the soil of reality."[1]

  1. Rogers, Carl. A Way of Being. Houghton Mifflin, 1980.