Harry Stack Sullivan Quotes

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  • There is no fun in psychiatry. If you try to get fun out of it, you pay a considerable price for your unjustifiable optimism.

    Fun   Optimism   Trying  
    Harry Stack Sullivan (1953). “The collected works”
  • The psychiatric interviewer is supposed to be doing three things: considering what the patient could mean by what he says; considering how he himself can best phrase what he wishes to communicate to the patient; and, at the same time, observing the general pattern of the events being communicated. In addition to that, to make notes which will be of more than evocative value, or come anywhere near being a verbatim record of what is said, in my opinion is beyond the capacity of most human beings.

    Mean   Science   Wish  
    Harry Stack Sullivan (1953). “The collected works”
  • I do not believe that I have had an interview with anybody in twenty-five years in which the person to whom I was talking was not annoyed during the early part of the interview by my asking stupid questions.

    Harry Stack Sullivan (1965). “The interpersonal theory of psychiatry”
  • It may be possible through detachment, to gain knowledge that is 'useful;' but only through participation is it possible to gain the knowledge that is helpful.

    Sports   May   Gains  
  • [O]ne of the greatest difficulties encountered in bringing about favorable change is this almost inescapable illusion that there is a perduring, unique, simple existent self, [which is] in some strange fashion, the patient's, or the subject person's, private property.

    Fashion   Unique   Simple  
  • When people approach you angrily, you take them very seriously, and, if you're like me, with the faint suggestion that you can be angry too, and that you would like to know what the shooting is about

    Harry Stack Sullivan (1965). “The interpersonal theory of psychiatry”
  • When the satisfaction or the security of another person becomes as significant to one as one's own satisfaction or security, then the state of love exists. Under no other circumstances is a state of love present, regardless of the popular usage of the term.

    Harry Stack Sullivan (1940). “Conceptions of Modern Psychiatry: The First William Alanson White Memorial Lectures”
  • Your emotional life is not written in cement during childhood. You write each chapter as you go along.

  • We are all much more simply human than otherwise, be we happy and successful, contented and detached, miserable and mentally disordered, or whatever.

    Harry Stack Sullivan (2013). “The Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry”, p.18, Routledge
  • Everybody has a great deal of experience in living. But no one lives in anything like the highest style of the art; and it is very disconcerting to notice how badly one lives in the sense of the extent to which fatigue and other discomforts are connected with one's important dealings with other people.

    Art   People   Style  
    Harry Stack Sullivan (2013). “The Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry”, p.3, Routledge
  • If you have to maintain self-esteem by pulling down the standing of others, you are extraordinarily unfortunate.

    Harry Stack Sullivan (2003). “The Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry”, p.242, Psychology Press
  • As you love yourself, so shall you love others. Strange but true, with no exceptions.

  • If you do not feel equal to the headaches that psychiatry induces, you are in the wrong business. It is work - work the like of which I do not know.

    Harry Stack Sullivan (1953). “The collected works”
  • It is easier to act yourself into a new way of feeling than to feel yourself into a new way of acting.

  • All of us are much more human than otherwise

  • What I am, at any given moment in the process of my becoming a person, will be determined by my relationships with those who love me or refuse to love me, with those whom I love or refuse to love.

  • There is a persistent funny form of suspicion in most of us that we can solve our own problems and be the masters of our own ships of life, but the fact of the matter is that by ourselves we can only be consumed by our problems and suffer the shipwreck.

  • The supply of interpretations, like that of advice, greatly exceeds the need for them.

    Harry Stack Sullivan (1965). “The interpersonal theory of psychiatry”
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We hope you have found the saying you were looking for in our collection! At the moment, we have collected 18 quotes from the Psychiatrist Harry Stack Sullivan, starting from February 21, 1892! We periodically replenish our collection so that visitors of our website can always find inspirational quotes by authors from all over the world! Come back to us again!
Harry Stack Sullivan quotes about:

Harry Stack Sullivan

  • Born: February 21, 1892
  • Died: January 14, 1949
  • Occupation: Psychiatrist