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“Your trials and difficulties are a golden opportunity for joy.”
Elizabeth George“When actors encounter a mishap during a stage performance,they transform it for good purpose by employing a technique called,“use the difficulty.” How can you “use the difficulty” in your life?”
Gina Greenlee, Postcards and Pearls: Life Lessons from Solo Moments on the Road“The best way out of a difficulty is through it.”
Anonymous“A man of character finds a special attractiveness in difficulty, since it is only by coming to grips with difficulty that he can realize his potentialities.”
Charles de Gaulle“Peace doesn’t deny difficulty, but it has an inner calm and quietness even while enduring the difficulty.”
Glenn C. Stewart“The difficulties in life are vital for our personal growth and well-being.”
Lailah Gifty Akita“Though not everything is so easy in doing, ponder before you say something is far difficult to do! When you think of the difficulty in getting it done, think and think again; you may have spent the same time you should have used for the utmost preparations that could have made the difficulty you look at but cannot see the panacea on something else, or you are not finding the necessary time, wit, courage, tenacity and the will power to release your whole and true self to master the very act and art of making difficult things easier!”
Ernest Agyemang Yeboah“The difficulty in life is the choice.”
George A. Moore“The best way out of a difficulty is through it.”
Will Rogers“In order to get over the ethical difficulties presented by the naive naturalism of many parts of those Scriptures, in the divine authority of which he firmly believed, Philo borrowed from the Stoics (who had been in like straits in respect of Greek mythology), that great Excalibur which they had forged with infinite pains and skill—the method of allegorical interpretation. This mighty 'two-handed engine at the door' of the theologian is warranted to make a speedy end of any and every moral or intellectual difficulty, by showing that, taken allegorically or, as it is otherwise said, 'poetically' or, 'in a spiritual sense,' the plainest words mean whatever a pious interpreter desires they should mean.”
Thomas Henry Huxley, The Evolution Of Theology: An Anthropological Study