Famous Quotes & Sayings

Buffering Love Quotes & Sayings

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Top Buffering Love Quotes

Buffering Love Quotes By Hannah Hart

I will have a deeper and personal relationship with my life. I will not have a casual fling with my life. I will find peace in that. I want to contribute to the world around me. Casual debauchery is not fulfilling. I want to send good messages and good meanings along the way. The journey is about spreading love and understanding. Not using each other. Not distraction. Tools for presence in life. I want to bond with like-minded people who echo my appreciation and awareness for them. — Hannah Hart

Buffering Love Quotes By Bella Andre

I'm bad at some things."
She raised an eyebrow. "Name one thing."
Making you fall in love with me the way I've always been in love with you. You only ever saw the jock while you let those artist assholes chase you. And hurt you. — Bella Andre

Buffering Love Quotes By Bo Burnham

Was Einstein's theory good? Relatively. — Bo Burnham

Buffering Love Quotes By Jaci Burton

I'll always be here for you. I'm not going anywhere. I'm never going to leave you. — Jaci Burton

Buffering Love Quotes By Vincent Van Gogh

If you hear a voice within you say you cannot paint, then by all means paint and that voice will be silenced. — Vincent Van Gogh

Buffering Love Quotes By Jonathan Lethem

Mingus Rude, Arthur Lomb, Gabriel Stern and Tim Vandertooth, even Aaron K. Doily: Dylan never met anyone who wasn't about to change immediately into someone else. His was a special talent for encountering persons about to shed one identity or disguise for another. He took it in stride by now. — Jonathan Lethem

Buffering Love Quotes By Skye Cleary

Awareness of freedom and responsibility creates anxiety, which is also referred to as anguish or angst. Aspects of romantic attachments can relieve anxieties. For example, Mario Mikulincer et al. argue that loving relationships can act as a "death-anxiety buffering mechanism", since the sense of security, protection, comfort, self-esteem, and social validation that close relationships provide may serve as defensive devices with respect to existential anxiety about the threat of mortality. — Skye Cleary