Bryant H. McGill

Bryant H. McGill
Bryant Harrison McGillis an American author, aphorist, speaker, and activist in the fields of self-development, personal freedom, and human rights. His writings and small aphorisms have been published in hundreds of books and are regularly used in newspapers, political speeches, network TV programs, university and library installations, peer-reviewed journals, academic papers and theses, and by university presidents and deans in non-violence programs and college ceremonies. McGill is a United Nations appointed Global Champion for the rights of women and girls,...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionAuthor
Date of Birth7 November 1969
CountryUnited States of America
Revolution starts in the mind. Question everything!
* The revolution of consciousness is connected to the food revolution
True education is limited to those people who would die without knowing, whereas the masses in the institutions are merely going through the motions, for education is a way of living.
We must be our own authentically unique truth, and question who we are, what created us, and what processes within us are alien and externally created.
To have our needs met, to love, to be loved, to feel safe in this world and to each know our purpose, is a simple matter of creating those blessings for others.
Change can be beautiful when we are brave enough to evolve with it, and change can be brutal when we fearfully resist.
We must each achieve greater individual consciousness and self-knowledge, and project mindful kindness toward everything and everyone.
We can only save ourselves through elevating our individual consciousness, by realizing there is already completeness within, and exercising as much considerate independence, respect and fairness as is possible.
Humility and full consciousness are inseparable.
The struggle is beautiful.
We fake perfect so others don't have to experience any unpleasant realities, because their life is just as fake as ours.
There are enough resources in the world for everyone.
People have moments of consciousness and epiphanies throughout their lives, but then suppress the realization.
The real violence is committed in the writing of history, the records of the legal system, the reporting of news, through the manipulation of social contracts, and the control of information.