"You will soon break the bow if you keep it always stretched"
About this Quote
Peale’s image lands because it smuggles a moral lesson into something almost tactile: you can feel the wood straining, hear the fiber complaining. “Always stretched” is the key phrase. He’s not warning against effort; he’s warning against unrelenting effort posed as virtue. In a culture that loves holy-sounding overcommitment, the bow becomes a quiet indictment of the kind of spirituality that confuses exhaustion with devotion.
As a mid-century American clergyman best known for The Power of Positive Thinking, Peale operated in an environment where success, faith, and personal discipline were increasingly bundled together. This line works as a corrective within that very package. It reassures the ambitious believer: rest isn’t a lapse in character. It’s maintenance. The subtext is pastoral and pragmatic: if you treat your inner life as an instrument, you have obligations not just to aim it, but to preserve it.
There’s also a subtle rebuke to performative productivity. A bow kept perpetually taut looks ready, impressive, virtuous. Until it snaps. Peale’s intent isn’t merely self-care-before-self-care; it’s a warning about the spiritual costs of constant readiness: anxiety, brittleness, the loss of joy that makes faith credible in the first place.
The metaphor lets him criticize burnout without sounding indulgent. He doesn’t say “slow down,” which can feel like surrender. He says “break,” which feels like consequence. That’s why it sticks: it frames rest not as permission, but as wisdom.
As a mid-century American clergyman best known for The Power of Positive Thinking, Peale operated in an environment where success, faith, and personal discipline were increasingly bundled together. This line works as a corrective within that very package. It reassures the ambitious believer: rest isn’t a lapse in character. It’s maintenance. The subtext is pastoral and pragmatic: if you treat your inner life as an instrument, you have obligations not just to aim it, but to preserve it.
There’s also a subtle rebuke to performative productivity. A bow kept perpetually taut looks ready, impressive, virtuous. Until it snaps. Peale’s intent isn’t merely self-care-before-self-care; it’s a warning about the spiritual costs of constant readiness: anxiety, brittleness, the loss of joy that makes faith credible in the first place.
The metaphor lets him criticize burnout without sounding indulgent. He doesn’t say “slow down,” which can feel like surrender. He says “break,” which feels like consequence. That’s why it sticks: it frames rest not as permission, but as wisdom.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
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