“I get excited about what the Holy Spirit is doing now through all the people he is refining and raising up all over this planet. I love connections and relationship and networking but it must be led by the Spirit.”
Daniel Smith“I get excited about what the Holy Spirit is doing now through all the people he is refining and raising up all over this planet. I love connections and relationship and networking but it must be led by the Spirit.”
Daniel Smith“Equally as therapeutic was the fact that disaster did not come.”
Daniel Smith“But a child is a sensitive instrument. You can hide the factual truth from a child, but you can't blanket influence. Your agitation will out, and over time it will mod your child's temperament as surely as water wear at rock.”
Daniel Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety“This is the trouble with origin hunting. There are so many origins.”
Daniel Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety“I felt so skinless at times! Things hit me so hard!”
Daniel Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety“If you're afraid of heights, lean over a railing. If you're afraid of germs, lick a floor. But what do you do if your greatest fear is of being afraid?”
Daniel Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety“The problem of anxiety isn't that the organism responds to threats by near-instantly powering up. That's clearly a good thing, species-survival-wise. It's that sometimes the organism starts seeing threats too readily.”
Daniel Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety“My mother took the measure of what could be built with the material she'd been given, and she built it.”
Daniel Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety“Freedom is anxiety's petri dish. If routine blunts anxiety, freedom incubates it. Freedom says, "Even if you don't want to make choices, you have to, and you can never be sure you have chosen correctly." Freedom says, "Even not to choose is to choose." Freedom says, "So long as you are aware of your freedom, you are going to experience the discomfort that freedom brings." Freedom says, "You're on your own. Deal with it.”
Daniel Smith, Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety