logo

Quotes About Safety

Do not ride the brakes," Jerry warned Arlin. "The rims will over heat
~ Unknown
On my upcoming sixteenth birthday, I would be eligible to get my driver's license. "You'll be a target of the state police, especially after dark," my father said, and offered me detailed advice on what to do in order to minimize my risk. He also urged me to stay alert whenever I found myself in an unfamiliar white neighborhood: "Always be conscious of where you are, what is going on, and who is around you," he counseled.
~ Unknown
The presence of the policeman around the corner is the only thing that keeps us civilised.
~ Unknown
As infants, all people experience fear of abandonment. Babies have two primary needs: to feel safe and secure and to develop a sense of trust in their caregivers. When they cry, they need to know that someone will respond with love, food, or a diaper change. When mommy or daddy leave, they need to know a parent will return.
~ Unknown
More people die each year from preventable medical errors in hospitals than from breast cancer and automobile accidents combined.
~ Unknown
What is there to imagine with a gun?" asked Papa . . . . "Something dead," Papa said more quietly. "That's what there is to imagine with a gun.
~ Paula Fox
walls to make sure that
~ Unknown
A town like this feels so safe and apart from the outside world. You start to wonder if it's dangerous.
~ Paula McLain
So I park in the shade and crack the window to give her plenty of fresh air.
~ Paula McLain
Tatia, let me take care of you." He stopped and took a breath.
~ Paullina Simons
Books make me feel safe. Books make me feel normal.
~ Unknown
Since no safety can there be 'Gainst the force of destiny, And the inclemency of fate;
~ Pedro Calderon de la Barca
Simpson Rowe was quick to say that only perpetrators are responsible for assault, but assertiveness and self-advocacy are crucial defensive skills.
~ Peggy Orenstein
The threat-to-minute ratio on this ship is staggering.
~ Unknown
We see attractive growth prospects for the safety equipment industry overall, but we believe fall protection is particularly attractive because of the potential for growth due to further development of safety regulations.
~ Unknown
I wrote to my son. 'Be a pessimist,' I advised Joseph on his first birthday on 21 November. 'It is the safest, most pragmatic way to be. Being an optimist may enrich the lives of others (with good cheer and smiling), but it leads you unaware to danger.
~ Pete Townshend
The worst thing that can happen to a child is to be unwelcomed in his family of origin - to never feel included. Moreover, many survivors have little or no experience of any social arena that feels safe and welcoming.
~ Unknown
Extensive childhood abuse installs a powerful people-are-dangerous program.
~ Unknown
It appears that children are hard-wired to release fear through angering and crying. The newborn baby, mourning the death of living safely and fully contained inside the mother, utters the first of many angry cries not only to call for nurturance and attention, but also to release her fear.
~ Unknown
While scaring us out of trusting others, the outer critic also pushes us to over-control them to make them safer. Over-controlling behaviors include shaming, excessive criticism, monologing [conversational control] and overall bossiness.
~ Unknown
Perfection is a self-persecutory myth. I do not have to be perfect to be safe or loved in the present. I am letting go of relationships that require perfection. I have a right to make mistakes. Mistakes do not make me a mistake.
~ Unknown
Traumatic emotional neglect occurs when a child does not have a single caretaker to whom she can turn in times of need or danger.
~ Unknown
Functional parents liberally and patiently greet their children's eagerness to participate and help regardless of the fact that this usually makes tasks take longer. Functional parents also "child-proof" their homes during the toddler stage (by moving all dangerous and breakable items out of reach) instead of systematically punishing and extinguishing their children's healthy curiosity and adventurousness.
~ Unknown
3. EMOTIONAL NURTURANCE: Meeting the child consistently with caring, regard and interest. Welcoming and valuing the child's full emotional expression. Modeling non-abusive expression of emotions. Teaching safe ways to release anger that do not hurt the child or others. Generous amounts of love, warmth, tenderness, and compassion. Honoring tears as a way of releasing hurt. Being a safe refuge. Humor.
~ Unknown