Skip to main content

Life & Wisdom Quote by Thomas Merton

"Perhaps I am stronger than I think"

About this Quote

"Perhaps I am stronger than I think" lands with the soft force of a prayer, not a pep talk. Thomas Merton, writing out of a life that moved from worldly ambition to Trappist silence, uses a single adverb to keep the ego in check. "Perhaps" matters: it refuses the swagger of certainty and replaces it with a disciplined humility. Strength here isn't a brand identity; it's a discovery, something revealed under pressure rather than claimed in advance.

The line’s subtext is a quiet argument with despair. Merton knew the modern mind’s talent for self-accusation: the reflex to interpret exhaustion as failure, doubt as proof of weakness. By proposing the opposite as a tentative possibility, he offers a small but radical reframe. You don’t need to feel invincible to endure; you only need to admit you might endure. That sliver of permission can loosen the grip of panic and self-narration.

Contextually, Merton wrote in a mid-century climate of anxiety and acceleration, and he did so from within a monastery that often gets misread as escape rather than confrontation. The strength he gestures toward is interior: the capacity to stay present, to withstand solitude, to keep faith with one’s better intentions even when the emotional weather turns. It works because it’s not triumphalist. It’s the sound of someone recognizing that resilience is often invisible until it’s already carried you through.

Quote Details

TopicConfidence
More Quotes by Thomas Add to List
Perhaps I am stronger than I think
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

USA Flag

Thomas Merton (January 31, 1915 - December 10, 1968) was a Author from USA.

33 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

Friedrich Nietzsche, Philosopher
Small: Friedrich Nietzsche