Ati Sarvatra Varjayet Quotes & Sayings
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Top Ati Sarvatra Varjayet Quotes

Ati sarvatra varjayet:
Excess of anything is bad. Some of us are attracted to Good. But the universe tries to maintain balance. So what is good for some may end up being bad for others ...
Agriculture is good for us humans as it gives us an assured supply of food, but it is bad for the animals that lose their forest and grazing land. — Amish Tripathi

They made us many promises, more than I can remember, but they never kept but one; they promised to take our land, and they took it. — Dee Brown

Jesus never made miracles the center of His gospel. — Sunday Adelaja

Big Rube was on my first album and some of my mixtapes. His words are so powerful. I want to speak every word he says into existence. I wanna be a part of that! I wanna be a part of greatness. His wordplay is great to me. — Nayvadius Cash

Then the train resumed its journey, leaving in its wake, in a snowy field in Poland, hundreds of naked orphans without a tomb. — Elie Wiesel

He was a crusty old bastard, dressed like my uncle in ancient denim coveralls, espadrilles and beret. He had a leathery, tanned and windblown face, hollow cheeks, and the tiny broken blood vessels on nose and cheeks that everyone seemed to have from drinking so much of the local Bordeaux. — Anthony Bourdain

Don't let your girlfriend cut your hair! — Stephen Colbert

Ouch. Well, you know what they say - you always hurt the one you love. Or is that the one you hate? I can never remember. - Puck — Julie Kagawa

Ati sarvatra varjayet. Excess should be avoided; excess of anything is bad. — Amish Tripathi

To see everything in God and to see God in everything normally takes a lifetime of practice. — Thomas Keating

The Catholics get rid of the difficulty by setting up an infallible Pope, and consenting formally to accept his verdicts, but the Protestants simply chase their own tails. By depriving revelation of all force and authority, they rob their so-called religion of every dignity. It becomes, in their hands, a mere romantic imposture, unsatisfying to the pious and unconvincing to the judicious. — H.L. Mencken