Emery allen biography

Emery’s Substack

  • Deeply caring about what people think of you will keep you from exploring and meeting your truest self. To be held back by the “criticism” of others will keep you living smaller than life is asking you to live.

  • People can’t always go as deeply as you want them to. We grow at different times and touch into parts of ourselves only when it is right for us to. We can’t see what we don’t see. What one offers you is everything they can in the place that they’re at. It doesn’t say anything more than that. If we understand that, we can leave with grace.

  • You can fall in love with everyone, but you don’t always have to. Leave loving some people to the imagination.

  • The way someone treats you is very often a reflection of where they’re at with themselves. We are full of projections from our childhood and teen years, often acting out of self protection. Not everything is so personal.

  • “Bad” feelings aren’t always bad. All feelings are meant to be felt. When we learn how to process them in more balanced and healthy ways they can serve us.

  • “No” is a full sent

    Frances Daisy Emery Allen

    American physician

    Frances Daisy Emery Allen

    Portrait of Dr. Frances Daisy Emery Allen from the 1898 Fort Worth University student yearbook.

    Born

    Frances Daisy Emery


    (1876-09-05)September 5, 1876

    Kaufman County, Texas

    DiedDecember 7, 1958(1958-12-07) (aged 82)

    Fort Worth, Texas

    NationalityAmerican
    Alma materFort Worth Medical College
    OccupationPhysician

    Dr. Frances Daisy Emery Allen (1876–1958) was a pioneering physician in Fort Worth, Texas. She was the first female graduate of a medical college in the state of Texas and one of the first female physicians to practice in Tarrant County.

    Early life

    Frances Daisy Emery was born September 5, 1876, in Kaufman County, Texas, to James Wallace and Elizabeth Brown Emery. James Wallace Emery had a master's degree from Bowdoin College and had been an outspoken abolitionist in the 1850s.[1] The ninth of twelve children, four-year-old Daisy announced her intentions to become a doctor, a goal encouraged by her parents. The Emery family mov

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