A Quote by Clint Eastwood

I do believe in self-help. — © Clint Eastwood
I do believe in self-help.
If you believe in living a respectable life, you believe in self-help which is the best help!
My especial object is to help the poor; the rich can help themselves. I believe in self-made men.
I dislike the word 'self-help.' Self-awareness, yes, but not self-help.
Attempts to help humans eliminate all self-ratings and views self-esteem as a self-defeating concept that encourages them to make conditional evaluations of self. Instead, it teaches people unconditional self-acceptance.
Self-help must precede help from others. Even for making certain of help from heaven, one has to help oneself.
I consider the indiscriminate propagation of self-help to be morally unacceptable... self-help is the opposite of autonomous or vernacular life.
I'm not a fan of self-help books - how can something be 'self-help' if the book itself is purportedly helping you?
Transcendent Oneness does not require self-examination, self-help, or self-work. It requires self-loss.
The myth of the self-sufficient individual and of the self-sufficient, protected, and protective familytells us that those who need help are ultimately inadequate. And it tells us that for a family to need help--or at least to admit it publicly--is to confess failure. Similarly, to give help, however generously, is to acknowledge the inadequacy of the recipients and indirectly to condemn them, to stigmatize them, and even to weaken what impulse they have toward self-sufficiency.
Self help books are pointless. Here's something for you... Men are from Mars, women are from Venus, and self help books are from Uranus.
Self-help books are for the birds. Self-help groups are where it's at.
The only real help is self-help. Anything else is just designed to get you to the point where you can help yourself.
I think self-reliance and self-responsibility and self-accountability will help you as a parent, a teacher, as a citizen as a friend.
I think that there is a tragic misfit at the core of me, and I've just done a lot of work on myself. I love a good self-help book; I've read a ton of them. I love self-help seminars and therapy and all that.
An honest bookstore would post the following sign above its 'self-help' section: 'For true self-help, please visit our philosophy, literature, history and science sections, find yourself a good book, read it, and think about it.
I've never read a self help book... the most self-help I've read is on a beer mat.
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