1. A certain amount of sorrow, pain or trouble is necessary for everyone from time to time. A ship without ballast would not be stable and move forward toward its destination. ——German philosopher Schopenhauer
2. People who are afraid of pain are already suffering the pain they fear. ——French essayist Montaigne
3. Just as empty containers make the loudest noise, those with the lowest intelligence are the best at nagging. ——Ancient Greek philosopher Plato
4. It is better for one person to suffer than to make the nation sad. ——British poet Dryden
5. Between grief and nothingness, I am willing to choose grief. ——American writer Faulkner
6. What makes people happy or depressed is not so much the fact as it is comparison. ——American inventor Fuller
7. Good things don’t go out, but bad things spread thousands of miles. ——British poet Milton
8. Grief itself is also a kind of medicine. ——British poet Cowper
9. Pleasure is good for the human body, but only sadness can cultivate spiritual strength. ——French writer Proust
10. Even if you are in trouble, you will not be uneasy. The fountain of life often flows out from the darkness. Don’t be depressed because of bad luck. Although patience is the most painful, its fruit is also the most fruitful. Sweet - Persian poet Saadi
11. People who have experienced sadness are the most compassionate. ——British playwright and poet Guy
12. Whoever wants to be helped in adversity should be generous to others in good times. ——British writer Saki
13. Let me tell you, sadness without hope is without passion. ——British poetess Browning
14. Blindness itself is not tragic, but being unable to bear blindness is tragic. ——British poet Milton
15. Life is composed of sobs, sobs and smiles, and among the three, sobs are the dominant one. —— American writer O. Henry
16. People who regard pain as the greatest disaster in life cannot be brave; people who regard joy as the most wonderful thing in life cannot control themselves. ——Cicero, the ancient Roman statesman
17. What people grieve is not the death of human beings but their birth. ——French thinker and philosopher Montesquieu
18. Pure and complete sorrow is as impossible as pure and complete joy. ——Russian writer Tolstoy
19. Sadness will reduce or hinder a person’s power to act. ——Dutch philosopher Spinoza
20. Sorrow and trouble either make people soft or cruel. ——British writer Mackintosh
21. Tears are the silent and sad language. ——French philosopher Voltaire
22. The most intense pain lasts the shortest. ——American poet Bryant
23. The most glorious days in a person's life are not the days of success, but the challenges to life and expectations for future glory arising from lamentation and despair. those days. ——French writer Flaubert
24. Mental illness is worse than physical illness. ——Syrian Latin writer Silas
25. The secret of pain is to worry about whether you are happy in your spare time. ——British playwright Bernard Shaw
26. Grieving for past disasters will lead to new disasters. ——British playwright Shakespeare
27. What’s the use of worrying? It’s not worth wasting your time and stuffing your worries into your pocket. Let a smile fill your heart forever. ——British poet Assaf