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Friday 4 May 2007

Our Greatest Fear

For many years I’ve looked for a book of wisdom. Even a page would do! But no, it comes down to a simple passage by Marianne Willamson. Tonight, chatting with some friends, I realized this is my code for life.

I’m not so much into the God thing, I’m not that girl. But I love the sentiment of this speech and I always will:

Excerpt from Return to Love

Our greatest fear is not that we are inadequate,
but that we are powerful beyond measure.
It is our light, not our darkness, that frightens us.

We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant,
gorgeous, handsome, talented and fabulous?
Actually, who are you not to be?
You are a child of God.

Your playing small does not serve the world.
There is nothing enlightened about shrinking
so that other people won’t feel insecure around you.

We were born to make manifest the glory of God within us.
It is not just in some; it is in everyone.
And, as we let our own light shine,
we consciously give other people permission to do the same.

As we are liberated from our fear,
our presence automatically liberates others.

Filed under:   faith(less),society
Posted by:   Molly | 18:35 | Comments (30)

30 Responses to “Our Greatest Fear”

  1. draco says:

    The same speech was used in the movie “Coach Carter”, nice.

  2. pohodo says:

    Wow, thanks for passing that along. It is quite inspiring!

  3. Kai Schaller says:

    Great words to live by; thanks for sharing.

  4. Ryan Behrman says:

    As a South African I’m constantly pointing out to people that Mandela never spoke these words. It’s an urban myth. Explanations at http://www.goodworksonearth.org/nelsonmandela2.html and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marianne_Williamson

    But they are beautiful words and thanks for reminding me of them.

  5. Molly says:

    Thanks for clearing that up Ryan. I’ve edited the post for accurcacy.

  6. Amit says:

    Hey Molly

    We have some more quotes from her over here – http://www.quotationsbook.com/author/7752/

  7. Danke! I like your style and your style-sheets. Now I like even better what you are telling online. Wow – may be the limits are only in our brain or is it soul or heart? Could you design a css for all?

  8. [...] Molly Holzschlag posted an excerpt from Marianne Willamson. It’s very timely that she posts this, because just a few days ago I was thinking of this passage and trying to locate it. I couldn’t remember who it was by, but I remembered that Belledame had posted it a few times. I wasn’t able to find it, though. And now, how serendipitous! So I figure I’ll repost it here, for reference and inspiration. Our greatest fear is not that we are inadequate, but that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness, that frightens us. [...]

  9. Vic says:

    Siddhartha by Hesse. Let me know when you find the answers.

  10. Don’t want to say the same as others, but it is inspiring and thank you, Molly. You made my day.

  11. Laura says:

    And to complement to her quote, how about Viktor Frankl: “What is to give light must endure burning.”

  12. Andrew says:

    Steven:

    A very similar idea to what you are talking about is present within Christendom through Pascal’s Wager (Wikipedia entry).

    Oh, and I am into the God thing :)

    Keep your chin up Molly!

  13. Marc says:

    Having a voice will make some people uncomfortable, but will liberate others to speak out for themselves. Thanks for sharing, Molly.

  14. Cari says:

    What good is a quote about being created in the splendor of God, if you don’t REALLY know HIM …

    How can you liberate others, when you can’t SAVE yourself …

    HINT: If you had power beyond measure, you would never die …

    ANSWER: There is ONE who can save … (Selah)

  15. Kathy C. says:

    Thanks for that Molly, it’s inspiring, morale boosting and perfectly timed, I needed something like that precisely this morning, as at lunchtime I have to go and tell a company I’m so good they DO want to pay me a decent wage for a few years at least, and I need reminding that I’m good and worth it. That helped.

  16. Birgit says:

    beautifully spoken! reading this makes one feel really good. and I’m not much into that God thing either :)

  17. Matt Hill says:

    It’s an inspiring passage, sure, but for those of us who don’t believe in such things, you can leave the God part out and still live your life by it.

  18. elena says:

    Having a voice will make some people uncomfortable, but will liberate others to speak out for themselves. Thanks for sharing, Molly.

  19. Shory Bella says:

    hmmmmmmmmmmm…welll its ver touching!!! im not into the GOD thing aswell im kinda u kno into lik eth e spitual thing/…very confused aswell…i wud reli like u to email m eback ive emaile you ur very experinced in life and i woudl like to get sum advice from uu! tc xxx

  20. Jed says:

    I heard this first in a class I took and it’s the only thing that really stuck with me. Sometimes I feel like there’s so much darkness to deal with and I feel like I’m clouded with doubt, but this helps to remind me that I can overcome, I already have overcome, I simply need to realize it. Thanks.

  21. carey says:

    this hit all of my faults right on ~~~ it put the fuel into my self realization… and power

  22. a person says:

    this a really beautiful and inspiring speech.
    i hope it inspires everyone to be the best you can be

  23. tv izle says:

    thanks for good write

  24. julian says:

    thanks, (from south africa), just warched a movie “akheelah the bee” very inspring in how thet used the phrase, just had to search for it.

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