Bryant H. McGill

Bryant H. McGill
Bryant Harrison McGillis an American author, aphorist, speaker, and activist in the fields of self-development, personal freedom, and human rights. His writings and small aphorisms have been published in hundreds of books and are regularly used in newspapers, political speeches, network TV programs, university and library installations, peer-reviewed journals, academic papers and theses, and by university presidents and deans in non-violence programs and college ceremonies. McGill is a United Nations appointed Global Champion for the rights of women and girls,...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionAuthor
Date of Birth7 November 1969
CountryUnited States of America
Bryant H. McGill quotes about
In America, educators punish those who actually think for themselves. There is only acceptance for popular opinion.
Nothing GREAT ever happens from thinking SMALL.
The supreme lesson of any education should be to think for yourself and to be yourself; absent this attainment, education creates dangerous, stupefying conformity.
The common person fears to think beyond the common.
Don't make the mistake of thinking that you have to agree with people and their beliefs to defend them from injustice.
Wake-up! Think for yourself, be yourself and return to what is real.
Most people do not actually know how to think for themselves, and unfortunately that prevents them from even knowing it.
Positive attitudes qualify you for positive experiences.
If you want good things to happen in your life you first have to believe good things are possible for yourself. Quit allowing negative and cynical thinking to get in the way of the good life you deserve.
We must quit thinking we know everything, and quit placing "knowledge" over kindness and compassion.
Every positive thought is a silent prayer which will change your life.
Through meditation and gentle cooperation, the body will heal itself with little or no effort.
I was advocating for world peace, but I was waging a violent war against my own body. I was speaking about poverty and starvation, but I was eating more than my fair share. I was a hypocrite.
My self-esteem had been crushed through years of childhood bullying and serious abuses, which would take me decades to overcome.