Keep busy.
“The secret of being miserable is to have the leisure to bother about whether you are happy or not.” —George Bernard Shaw
Don’t fuss about trifles.
Benjamin Disraeli, statesman, said, “Life is too short to be little.” So, let us not major in the minors.
Use the law of averages to outlaw your worries.
“We could probably outlaw 90% of our worries right now if we would cease our fretting long enough to discover whether, by the law of averages, there was any justification for our worries.” —Dale Carnegie
Cooperate with the inevitable.
“If we rail and kick against it and grow bitter, we won’t change the inevitable; but we will change ourselves You can either bend with the inevitable sleet storms of life —or you can resist them and break.” —Dale Carnegie
Decide just how much anxiety a thing may be worth and refuse to give it more.
“We are fools when we overpay for a thing in terms of what it takes out of our very existence.” —Dale Carnegie
Don’t worry about the past.
“Let the past bury its dead. Don’t saw sawdust.” —Dale Carnegie
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