Famous Quotes & Sayings

Atisha Dipankara Quotes & Sayings

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Top Atisha Dipankara Quotes

Atisha Dipankara Quotes By Hassan Abukar

My mother made sweet tea for him. He seemed a good conversationalist, but perhaps not a good listener, because at times he appeared to be engaged in a monologue with himself. In the midst of the conversation, my father gave me five Somali shillings, an amount equivalent to one U.S dollar. I was so excited to have paper money that I left immediately to go to a neighborhood store to buy cold soda and candy. My father was still talking and laughing when I returned to the house. I watched him closely, studying his every move. I wondered if had come to visit me or to consume large quantities of tea. — Hassan Abukar

Atisha Dipankara Quotes By Mindy McGinnis

A man who dips his sword in every well soon finds it spotted with rust, — Mindy McGinnis

Atisha Dipankara Quotes By Tom Colicchio

If I'm doing an event, if it's a charity event, where it's a walk-around event, where I gotta put a thousand small plates out in the course of a four-hour event, I gotta make sure I can do something that I know I can produce, that's going to be consistent and good all night long. — Tom Colicchio

Atisha Dipankara Quotes By Paulo Coelho

We are always prepared to defend ourselves, because we all live with the fear and paranoia that other people don't like us. — Paulo Coelho

Atisha Dipankara Quotes By Jackie G. Mills

When I write I face my demons, and defeat them. — Jackie G. Mills

Atisha Dipankara Quotes By Steve Buscemi

It's always fun to get to do independent film because I believe that that's the life blood of film. It's about writers and directors who truly have their own vision, and that's hard. — Steve Buscemi

Atisha Dipankara Quotes By William Easterly

The technocratic illusion is that poverty results from a shortage of expertise, whereas poverty is really about a shortage of rights. The emphasis on the problem of expertise makes the problem of rights worse. The technical problems of the poor (and the absence of technical solutions for those problems) are a symptom of poverty, not a cause of poverty. This book argues that the cause of poverty is the absence of political and economic rights, the absence of a free political and economic system that would find the technical solutions to the poor's problems. The dictator whom the experts expect will accomplish the technical fixes to technical problems is not the solution; he is the problem. — William Easterly