Words matter. These are the best Arianna Huffington Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
The middle class is teetering on the brink of collapse just as surely as AIG was in the fall of 2009 – only this time, it’s not just one giant insurance company (and its banking counterparties) facing disaster, it’s tens of millions of hardworking Americans who played by the rules.
Women process stress differently. If we can change the workplace culture to make it more welcoming for women, we’re also going to improve behavior, and we’re going to improve outcomes.
Any president’s actions have real consequences in real people’s lives.
America is a country ready to be taken, in fact, longing to be taken by political leaders ready to restore democracy and trust to the political process.
It’s no longer an exaggeration to say that middle-class Americans are an endangered species.
I think she’s the foundation of everything I’ve done. I think, definitely, my mother’s fear of failure helps make me more resilient and helps make me persevere.
The land of burnout is not a place I ever want to go back to.
Increasingly, staying in the middle class – let alone aspiring to become middle class – is becoming a game of chance.
I’m pulling out, and I’m going to concentrate every ounce of time and energy over the next week working to defeat the recall because I realize now that’s the only way to defeat Arnold Schwarzenegger.
We take better care of our smartphones than we do of ourselves – the phones are always recharged!
But, in fact, there is nothing that can bring you closer to fearlessness about everything else in the world than being a parent – because everyday fears – like not being approved of – pale by comparison to the fears you have about your children.
Women need to lead the way to change our culture of burnout – both for their sake and also for the sake of successful men who desperately need a new model of success. And the still-very-macho world of STEM is a great place to start.
Not only is it harder to be a man, it is also harder to become one.
I see some people stay in one place because it’s convenient or it’s comfortable. But they’re missing out on their passion.
When we take care of ourselves, we are more effective, we are more creative, and we are more successful in a broad definition of the word.
I think while all mothers deal with feelings of guilt, working mothers are plagued by guilt on steroids!
Trying to be Supermom is as futile as trying to be Perfect Mom. Not going to happen.
I can tell you with authority that when I’m exhausted, when I’m running on empty, I’m the worst version of myself.
I get asked all the time how much sleep I get. That’s what happens when you write a book called ‘The Sleep Revolution,’ travel around the world talking about it, and found a company committed to ending our global burnout crisis.
If you want to have the clarity and steadiness to deal with that ‘3:00 A.M. phone call,’ you should better have made sure that you’re not running on empty when that phone rings.
The more we refuse to buy into our inner critics – and our external ones too – the easier it will get to have confidence in our choices, and to feel comfortable with who we are – as women and as mothers.
Our current obsession with creativity is the result of our continued striving for immortality in an era when most people no longer believe in an after-life.
I declare an end to my day by removing my phone from my bedroom and putting it in a phone charging bed.
I’ve always been fascinated by dreams – mine are so vivid. I went through a period in my 20s when I wrote down my dreams every morning. Then life intervened, and I stopped doing it.
It would be futile to attempt to fit women into a masculine pattern of attitudes, skills and abilities and disastrous to force them to suppress their specifically female characteristics and abilities by keeping up the pretense that there are no differences between the sexes.
There’s something sacred in all of us that we need to protect, and sleep is a way to connect with it, nourish it, and make it more present in our lives.
We need to accept that we won’t always make the right decisions, that we’ll screw up royally sometimes – understanding that failure is not the opposite of success, it’s part of success.
It feels like we have two threads running through our lives: one pulling us into the world to achieve, the other pulling us back to replenish us. These threads can seem at odds, but really, they enforce each other. It’s not a trade-off between success and sleep.
Liberation is an ever shifting horizon, a total ideology that can never fulfill its promises. It has the therapeutic quality of providing emotionally charged rituals of solidarity in hatred – it is the amphetamine of its believers.
If we live in a perpetual state of outrage, Trump wins. Because when we become depleted and exhausted and sapped of our energy, we’re not as resourceful, creative, or effective.
But you have to do what you dream of doing even while you’re afraid.
When it comes to our collective health, how we deal with the multiple crises and problems around us also depends on the power of context – in other words, our resilience.
I used to stay up, stupidly, to work, and I’d just eat to keep my eyes open. I wasn’t even hungry – it was just a way to power through.
Mainstream media tend to just mouth the conventional wisdom, to see everything through the filter of right and left.
The goal of any true resistance is to affect outcomes, not just to vent. And the only way to affect outcomes and thrive in our lives is to find the eye in the hurricane and act from that place of inner strength.