Margaret Mead Quotes About Failing

We have collected for you the TOP of Margaret Mead's best quotes about Failing! Here are collected all the quotes about Failing starting from the birthday of the Cultural Anthropologist – December 16, 1901! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 294 sayings of Margaret Mead about Failing. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • The prophet who fails to present a bearable alternative and yet preaches doom is part of the trap that he postulates.

    Margaret Mead (1970). “Culture and Commitment”
  • The prophet who fails to present a bearable alternative and yet preaches doom is part of the trap that he postulates. Not only does he picture us caught in a tremendous man-made or God-made trap from which there is no escape, but we must also listen to him day in, day out, describe how the trap is inexorably closing. To such prophecies the human race, as presently bred and educated and situated, is incapable of listening. So some dance and some immolate themselves as human torches; some take drugs and some artists spill their creativity in sets of randomly placed dots on a white ground.

  • The Samoan puts the burden of amatory success upon the man and believes that women need more initiating, more time for maturing of sexual feeling. A man who fails to satisfy a woman is looked upon as a clumsy, inept blunderer.

    Margaret Mead (1973). “Coming of Age in Samoa”
  • The time has come, I think, when we must recognize bisexuality as a normal form of human behavior... we shall not really succeed in discarding the straitjacket of our cultural beliefs about sexual choice if we fail to come to terms with the well-documented, normal human capacity to love members of both sexes.

    Redbook Magazine, 1975.
  • Every act of motherhood contains a dual intent, as the mother holds the child close and prepares it to move way from her, as she supports the child and stands it firmly on its own feet, and as she guards it against danger and sends it out across the yard, down by the stream, and across the traffic-crowded highway. Unless a mother can do both - gather her child close and turn her child out toward the world - she will fail in her purpose.

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Margaret Mead

  • Born: December 16, 1901
  • Died: November 15, 1978
  • Occupation: Cultural Anthropologist