Aprig Dex Quotes & Sayings
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Top Aprig Dex Quotes

I try to create paintings that are a window for the imagination. If people look at my work and are reminded of the way things once were, or perhaps, the way they could be, then I've done my job. — Thomas Kinkade

It is a little considered fact that simply in the process of becoming a mother, one does not automatically become a saint. — Eugenia Price

Social and cultural change, however desirable, should not be effected by the engines of national power. Let us, through persuasion and education, seek to improve institutions we deem defective. But let us, in doing so, respect the orderly processes of the law. Any other course enthrones tyrants and dooms freedom. — Barry Goldwater

My daughter is a real migraine sufferer; the minute she has a handful of Haribo sweets, she gets a headache. There's a connection between what the liver can't break down with what goes on to trigger a headache. You just have to be aware. — Sheherazade Goldsmith

Americans believe cotton is best, but we've invented new fabrics that will change your lifestyle. — Tadashi Yanai

I felt I was drawing close to that age, that place in life, where you realize one day what you'd told yourself was a Zen detachment turns out to be naked fear. You'd had one serious love relationship in your life and it had ended in tragedy, and the tragedy had broken something inside you. But instead of trying to repair the broken place, or at least really stop and look at it, you skated and joked. You had friends, you were a decent citizen. You hurt no one. And your life was somehow just about half of what it could be. — Roland Merullo

a good way to make some cash without worrying about boring things like originality or operating capital. — Leonard Richardson

the upright shall behold his face. — Anonymous

Real loss only occurs when you lose something that you love more than yourself. — Anonymous

As it is in the body, so it is in the mind; practice makes it what it is, and most even of those excellencies, what are looked on as natural endowments, will be found, when examined into more narrowly, to be the product of exercise, and to be raised to that pitch, only by repeated actions. — John Locke