My mother used to say, "He who angers you conquers you."
It's better to be a lion for a day than a sheep all your life.
In the history of medicine, it is not always the great scientist or the learned doctor who goes forward to discover new fields, new avenues, new ideas.
He who angers you conquers you.
The American doctor, in my opinion, possesses a combination of conservatism and that other quality which has put the United States in the forefront in almost every department of science - that is, an eagerness to know what it is really all about in order that he may not be the one left behind if there is something to it.
At first, I was called a quack, a charlatan, and worse, year after year, in Australia, England and the United States, by men who simply refused to believe that a nurse from 'the bush' could devise a treatment which succeeded where they had failed.
Some minds remain open long enough for the truth not only to enter but to pass on through by way of a ready exit without pausing anywhere along the route.
I do not want medical men to discuss whether or not my work is valuable, because I know what it will do. I want them to tell me how best this new knowledge of rapidly restoring paralysed people to health and strength can be applied where it is needed.
Panic plays no part in the training of a nurse.
'O sleep, O gentle sleep,' I thought gratefully, 'Nature's soft nurse!'
I spent more time on dark ships in danger zones than any other woman in the world.
I have a message to give to the world, and I shall not be thwarted.