Quotes from Elisabeth Kubler-Ross


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Love is really the only thing we can possess, keep with us, and take with us.


For those who seek to understand it, death is a highly creative force. The highest spiritual values of life can originate from the thought and study of death.


When we grow older and begin to realize that our omnipotence is really not so omnipotent, that our strongest wishes are not powerful enough to make the impossible possible, the fear that we have contributed to the death of a loved one diminishes - and with it, the guilt.


Those who learned to know death, rather than to fear and fight it, become our teachers about life.


For years, I have been stalked by a bad reputation. Actually, I have been pursued by people who have regarded me as the 'Death and Dying' Lady. They believe that having spent more than three decades in research into death and life after death qualifies me as an expert on the subject. I think they miss the point.


As far as service goes, it can take the form of a million things. To do service, you don't have to be a doctor working in the slums for free, or become a social worker. Your position in life and what you do doesn't matter as much as how you do what you do.


We often assume that if we are good people we will not suffer the ills of the world.


I didn't fully realize it at the time, but the goal of my life was profoundly molded by this experience - to help produce, in the next generation, more Mother Teresas and less Hitlers.


Medicine has changed greatly in the last decades. Widespread vaccinations have practically eradicated many illnesses, at least in western Europe and the United States. The use of chemotherapy, especially the antibiotics, has contributed to an ever decreasing number of fatalities in infectious diseases.


The truth does not need to be defended.


Death is not painful. It is the most beautiful experience you will have.


Live, so you do not have to look back and say: 'God, how I have wasted my life.'


Dying is something we human beings do continuously, not just at the end of our physical lives on this earth.


I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that there is no death the way we understood it. The body dies, but not the soul.


It is difficult to accept death in this society because it is unfamiliar. In spite of the fact that it happens all the time, we never see it.


We're put here on Earth to learn our own lessons. No one can tell you what your lessons are; it is part of your personal journey to discover them. On these journeys we may be given a lot, or just a little bit, of the things we must grapple with, but never more than we can handle.


My work with AIDS patients started right at the beginning of the epidemic, totally unplanned and spontaneous, as all my work had proceeded in the previous two decades, if it were not already my whole life-style! In the early eighties, we knew very little about this peculiar disease.


It is inconceivable for our unconscious to imagine an actual ending of our own life here on Earth, and if this life of ours has to end, the ending is always attributed to a malicious intervention from the outside by someone else.


The only incontrovertible fact of my work is the importance of life.


It's only when we truly know and understand that we have a limited time on Earth - and that we have no way of knowing when our time is up - that we will begin to live each day to the fullest, as if it was the only one we had.