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The ideal visions of one age eventually are seen as its excesses by the next.
Lillian B. Rubin
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Lillian B. Rubin
Age: 90 †
Born: 1924
Born: January 13
Died: 2014
Died: June 17
Author
Feminist
Psychologist
Sociologist
Writer
Lillian B. Rubin
Lillian Breslow Rubin
Eventually
Ideals
Generations
Vision
Seen
Excesses
Age
Visions
Next
Excess
Ideal
More quotes by Lillian B. Rubin
The depth of a friendship - how much it means to us ... depends, at least in part, upon how many parts of ourselves a friend sees, shares and validates.
Lillian B. Rubin
In fact, the family as an institution is both oppressive and protective and, depending on the issue, is experienced sometimes one way, sometimes the other - often in some mix of the two - by most people who live in families.
Lillian B. Rubin
Children crawl before they walk, walk before they run--each generally a precondition for the other. And with each step they take toward more independence, more mastery of the environment, their mothers take a step away--each a small separation, a small distancing.
Lillian B. Rubin
Sometimes we choose a friend who mirrors our fantasies, dreams of a self we wish we could be.
Lillian B. Rubin
From our earliest beginnings, we have been a nation obsessed with sex, titillated by it at the same time that we fear it, elaborating rules to contain it at the same time that we violate them.
Lillian B. Rubin
Sexual freedom is about choice. It's the freedom to say no as well as yes.
Lillian B. Rubin
Intimacy. We hunger for it, but we also fear it.
Lillian B. Rubin
How then can we account for the persistence of the myth that inside the empty nest lives a shattered and depressed shell of a woman--a woman in constant pain because her children no longer live under her roof? Is it possible that a notion so pervasive is, in fact, just a myth?
Lillian B. Rubin
We are a society that values a man for what he does in the world, a woman for how she looks.
Lillian B. Rubin
Contrary to all we hear about women and their empty-nest problem, it may be fathers more often than mothers who are pained by thechildren's imminent or actual departure--fathers who want to hold back the clock, to keep the children in the home for just a little longer. Repeatedly women compare their own relief to their husband's distress
Lillian B. Rubin