Quotes
Letting Go
5 memorable lines from Letting Go by David R. Hawkins, each with the idea behind it.
“Letting go is an inner decision to stop feeding the emotion with resistance.”
Hawkins' practical edge is that surrender is not denial. You still feel the charge, but you stop adding the second layer: argument, proof, performance, and self-protection.
“A feeling can be fully allowed without being obeyed.”
The book separates sensation from identity. Fear may be present, anger may be present, grief may be present, but none of them needs to become the executive in charge of the next action.
“Resistance keeps the old story alive longer than the original pain.”
Suppression and rumination look opposite, but both keep attention locked on the same wound. Letting go changes the contract: the emotion can move, but it no longer gets endless narration.
“Acceptance is not approval; it is contact with what is real.”
Hawkins is not asking readers to like every circumstance. He is pointing at the relief that comes when reality no longer has to pass an internal courtroom before you can respond cleanly.
“The surrendered mind has more energy because it is no longer paying rent to control.”
A major promise of the book is reclaimed vitality. Every demand that life be different consumes attention. Release gives that attention back to perception, courage, and love.