A Quote by Emma Walton Hamilton

My mom's coping mechanism was to be strong and resilient. She is very compassionate and nonjudgmental. — © Emma Walton Hamilton
My mom's coping mechanism was to be strong and resilient. She is very compassionate and nonjudgmental.
My humour is a mix of my parents'. I get the chatty, anecdotal stuff from my dad and the filth from my mam, Valerie. She has a very dark sense of humour, I think from having grown up with disabilities. It's a coping mechanism. She had polio when she was eight and has been in a wheelchair for about 20 years.
Lying is not only a defense mechanism; it's also a coping mechanism and a survival technique.
I was very thankful that my mother was a very strong mom. She was mom and dad. She is mom and dad. She is my hero.
I am just so thankful that my mom was a fantastic mom. She wasn't a stage mother; she didn't push me. She was happy if I was happy. We are so different. I was very shy; my mom did all the talking. She was my strength. She never expected that I would be this ballerina.
I look up to a strong woman; maybe that's why I fell for Gaga. She works incredibly hard and is very strong and inspirational like Mom, with a great work ethic.
My mom is one of those people that you feel honored to meet. And no matter who you are, you fall in love with her because she is spiritual, she's inspiring, she's strong, she's funny, she's creative, she's talented... she's everything that I want to be.
For me, writing is a kind of coping mechanism.
Everyone thinks their mom is a superhero, and l feel like I want to be just like my mom. A superhero. She’s a very strong lady.
Give me rampant intellectualism as a coping mechanism.
My coping mechanism with my dyslexia is to use wit and humor.
My mom. My grandma, my grandfather. We have a very strong, strong line of amazing people in the family. Very strong women.
My mom was very much alpha. I admired her because she was the working mom on the go. She's such a boss. She's an OG, as they say.
Comedy is a coping mechanism, and it helps us stay alive.
The idea of evil is always subject to denial as a coping mechanism.
It's a dynamic of grief within any family, and I found, after we lost Steve, his dad just began distancing himself. And I think it's a coping mechanism. I found it very confusing.
My mom is not religious, but she's a very spiritual, magical kind of lady. One time, when I was younger, my mom said she was a witch and that my grandmother was also a witch. It was late at night, and she was really sleepy, but I took it very seriously because I always wanted to go to Hogwarts.
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