Words matter. These are the best Julia Butterfly Hill Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I can hold space for people who think I’m a nut job. It’s cool. But I know from my own experience what I experienced. I know what I learned. I know what I saw. I know what I heard.
I hope to get the general public listening, the ones curious to see the woman who sat in the tree for two years.
I don’t really watch movies. I don’t own a TV.
I’m so drastically independent; I don’t tend to flourish in relationships.
I asked God to use me as a vessel, so I guess you have to be careful what you ask for.
I’m a poster child for Luddites. It was a challenge for me to open myself up the tech world.
I don’t endorse products, only actions and beliefs.
We live in a world that is full of problems, and we are the solutions to those problems.
I live in a tree called Luna. I am trying to save her life. Believe me, this is not what I intended to do with my own.
I didn’t climb into that tree expecting to become a spokesperson.
I’ve always felt that as long as I was able, I was supposed to give all I’ve got to ensure a healthy and loving legacy for those still to come, and especially for those with no voice.
When I pray, I ask for guidance in my life to be the best person I can be, to learn what I need to learn, and to grow from what I learn.
I have been stubborn and getting into trouble since I was 2, but I learned how to redirect that into good causes.
For me, love is not about froufrou New Age-ism. It’s about a way of living and honoring the interconnectedness of life and accepting our responsibility and our power to change the world for the better.
I don’t do the media because of ‘Woo-woo, Julia Butterfly,’ as I call it. I’m not into promoting me. I’m into talking about why I’ve done what I’ve done, why I continue to do this work and why other people should care.
We live in a disposable society. We throw so much away. But it doesn’t come from nowhere. It comes from the planet and it comes from future generations’ lives.
My father was an itinerant preacher who traveled the country’s heartland preaching from town to town and church to church.