Famous Quotes About Discipline
7 sourced quotes about disciplinefrom history's great thinkers.
Quotes About Discipline
“I try to learn from the past, but I plan for the future by focusing exclusively on the present. That's where the fun is.”
— Think Like a Billionaire: Everything You Need to Know About Success, Real Estate, and Life (2004)
This captures Trump''s stated operational philosophy: using the past as data, planning against future scenarios, but acting exclusively in the present. It is a practical formulation of mindful action that resonates with much leadership and performance psychology, irrespective of its source.
“Far and away the best prize that life has to offer is the chance to work hard at work worth doing.”
— Address at the New York State Fair, Syracuse, 7 September 1903
Roosevelt delivered this as part of a speech on labor, arguing that all honest work has dignity and that meaningful work is its own reward. He himself was a living demonstration: despite being a wealthy patrician, he sought out physically demanding work — cattle ranching in Dakota, military service in Cuba — not for necessity but because he believed that work worthy of serious effort was the best the world offered.
“You have power over your mind - not outside events. Realize this, and you will find strength.”
— Meditations, Book VI, section 8 (trans. Gregory Hays)
This is one of the foundational Stoic insights: the Stoics divided all things into "up to us" (our judgments, impulses, desires) and "not up to us" (everything external). Aurelius returned to this distinction constantly in Meditations, which was never intended for publication — it was a personal journal of daily reminders. He wrote it as emperor of Rome, when everything external was available to him, to remind himself that none of it was the actual source of strength.
“Work is love made visible.”
— The Prophet (1923), chapter "On Work"
In The Prophet, Almustafa calls labor "love made visible" to argue against the separation between vocation and devotion. Gibran believed that work performed without love is a form of death — going through the motions without presence. The full passage asks whether the baker loves his bread, the weaver loves his cloth: if so, the product is infused with the maker''s spirit and becomes a form of communion with those who receive it.
“Nothing will work unless you do.”
— Widely attributed — from various interviews and commencement speeches
Angelou stated this in various forms as a rebuttal to the idea that good intentions are sufficient. She had little patience for aspirational inaction — her own life was marked by prodigious work: seven autobiographies, five essay collections, dozens of poems, stage plays, and the delivery of her poem "On the Pulse of Morning" at President Clinton''s inauguration. The aphorism is a work ethic compressed to six words.
“When your rage is choking you, it is best to say nothing.”
— Widely attributed to Butler — consistent with themes in her novels, including Kindred (1979)
Butler said various versions of this in interviews about her writing practice. She wrote science fiction featuring Black women protagonists at a time when both were systematically excluded from the genre, and she did so by choosing disciplined silence — not engaging with the gatekeepers who dismissed her, but consistently producing the work. The instruction is a practical tool for anyone whose anger, however justified, is consuming the energy needed for creation.
“With self-discipline most anything is possible.”
— Widely attributed to Roosevelt — consistent with his documented writings and speeches
Roosevelt was an extraordinarily disciplined man: he wrote 35 books, held the US boxing championship while at Harvard, and maintained a reading habit of one to three books per day throughout his presidency. He framed self-discipline not as restriction but as the enabling condition for ambitious action. Discipline, in his framework, creates capacity rather than limiting it.