“The most complete definition of a commitment is this: falling in love with something and then building a structure of behavior around it for those moments when love falters.” – David Brooks
Ten Commitments of Humanists by Kristin Wintermute
“The most complete definition of a commitment is this: falling in love with something and then building a structure of behavior around it for those moments when love falters.” – David Brooks
Ten Commitments of Humanists by Kristin Wintermute
“It occurred to me that there were two sets of virtues, the résumé virtues and the eulogy virtues. The résumé virtues are the skills you bring to the marketplace. The eulogy virtues are the ones that are talked about at your funeral — whether you were kind, brave, honest or faithful. Were you capable of deep love?”
“But if you live for external achievement, years pass and the deepest parts of you go unexplored and unstructured. You lack a moral vocabulary. It is easy to slip into a self-satisfied moral mediocrity. You grade yourself on a forgiving curve. You figure as long as you are not obviously hurting anybody and people seem to like you, you must be O.K. But you live with an unconscious boredom, separated from the deepest meaning of life and the highest moral joys. Gradually, a humiliating gap opens between your actual self and your desired self, between you and those incandescent souls you sometimes meet.”
— David Brooks, “The Moral Bucket List”
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/04/12/opinion/sunday/david-brooks-the-moral-bucket-list.html