Quotes About Courage
I believe that you can't know courage without conquering fear, and you can't really know joy without knowing sadness.
~ Sean Hepburn Ferrer
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Bob, ihtiÅŸam?n, geçmiÅŸin as?ls?z gurur ve önyarg?s?na ödlekçe ve hiç düÅŸünmeden sar?l?rken, aÅŸk? edebiyetten topyekün ayr? düÅŸürmüÅŸ Bat? insan?ndan ziyade, DoÄŸululara ve köylü tak?m?na daha yak???r bir haz olduÄŸuna inan?yordu.
~ Sean Penn
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His own men, those who would attack in the morning, knelt on the earth, faces hidden behind one hand, in an agonizing tunnel of their own, a darkness where there was no time but where they tried to look on death.
~ Sebastian Faulks
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They saw the Scots coming up out of their burrows like raving women in their skirts, dying in ripples across the yellowish-brown soil. They saw the steady tread of the Hampshire's as though they had willingly embarked on a slow-motion dance from which they were content not to return. They saw men from every corner walking, powerless, into an engulfing storm.
~ Sebastian Faulks
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They had seen things no human eyes had looked on before, and they had not turned their gaze away. They were in their own view a formidable group of men. No inferno would now melt them, no storm destroy, because they had seen the worst and they had survived.
~ Sebastian Faulks
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At other times I sit and wait. If nothing comes, I've discovered that it's better just to write something – anything. You can always tear up the piece of paper and throw it away. But if you don't begin, then nothing comes. You have to submit.
~ Sebastian Faulks
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Gray looked at him. "If I die, Wraysford, and you are still alive, I want you to take charge of the company." "Me? Why not Harrington?" "Because you are a mad, cold-hearted devil and that is what we are going to need.
~ Sebastian Faulks
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Women tend to act heroically within their own moral universe, regardless of whether anyone else knows about it - donating more kidneys to nonrelatives than men do, for example. Men, on the other hand, are far more likely to risk their lives at a moment's notice, and that reaction is particularly strong when others are watching, or when they are part of a group.
~ Sebastian Junger
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How do you become an adult in a society that doesn't ask for sacrifice? How do you become a man in a world that doesn't require courage? Those
~ Sebastian Junger
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Most firefights go by so fast that acts of bravery or cowardice are more or less spontaneous. Soldiers might live the rest of their lives regretting a decision that they don't even remember making; they might receive a medal for doing something that was over before they even knew they were doing it.
~ Sebastian Junger
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I once asked Cortez whether he would risk his life for other men in the platoon. "I'd actually throw myself on the hand grenade for them," he said. I asked him why. "Because I actually love my brothers," he said. "I mean, it's a brotherhood. Being able to save their life so they can live, I think is rewarding. Any of them would do it for me.
~ Sebastian Junger
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Civilians understand soldiers to have a kind of baseline duty, and that everything above that is considered "bravery." Soldiers see it the other way around: either you're doing your duty or you're a coward.
~ Sebastian Junger
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But in any society, leaders who aren't willing to make sacrifices aren't leaders, they're opportunists, and opportunists rarely have the common good in mind. They're easy to spot, though: opportunists lie reflexively, blame others for failures, and are unapologetic cowards.
~ Sebastian Junger
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Self-serving leaders can literally get people killed. But in any society, leaders who aren't willing to make sacrifices aren't leaders, they're opportunists, and opportunists rarely have the common good in mind. They're easy to spot, though: opportunists live reflexively, blame others for failure, and are unapologetic cowards.
~ Sebastian Junger
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Combat jammed so much adrenaline through your system that fear was rarely an issue; far more indicative of real courage was how you felt before the big operations, when the implications of losing your life really had a chance to sink in. My personal weakness wasn't fear so much as the anticipation of it.
~ Sebastian Junger
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Cowardice is another form of community betrayal, and most Indian tribes punished it with immediate death. (If that seems harsh, consider that the British military took "cowards" off the battlefield and executed them by firing squad as late as World War I.)
~ Sebastian Junger
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This is the war too, and you have to look straight at it, I told myself. You have to look straight at all of it or you have no business being here at all.
~ Sebastian Junger
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If war were purely and absolutely bad in every single aspect and toxic in all its effects, it would probably not happen as often as it does. But in addition to all the destruction and loss of life, war also inspires ancient human virtues of courage, loyalty, and selflessness that can be utterly intoxicating to the people who experience them.
~ Sebastian Junger
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People think you always have to go for life, but you don't. You can quit.
~ Sebastian Junger
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the 1,323 soldiers who were wounded in that war and
~ Sebastian Junger
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The reprieve doesn't last long though; within a couple of hours the waves are back up to 70 feet. A 70 foot wave has an angled face of well over 100 feet. The Seastate has reached levels that no one on the boat, and few people one earth, have ever seen. When the Contship Holland finally limped into port several days later, one of the officers stepped off and swore he would never set foot on another ship again.
~ Sebastian Junger
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Billy's at 44 north, 56 west and heading straight into meteorological hell.
~ Sebastian Junger
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He had survived two days in his underwear on the North Atlantic. Later, when asked how long it took him to warm up after his ordeal, he said, without a hint of irony, "Oh, three or four months.
~ Sebastian Junger
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Perhaps Vulnerability was a land that, for some people, could never be entirely traversed.
~ Sena Jeter Naslund
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