Cahen Law Quotes & Sayings
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Top Cahen Law Quotes

My only fear is that I may live too long. This would be a subject of dread to me. — Thomas Jefferson

If you could stop reflecting, immediately you establish yourself in the ocean of peace. — Nirmala Srivastava

Dieting makes me want to murder everyone around me. — David Foster Wallace

It was a hallmark of Nelson Mandela's leadership that being open to change made him appear not weaker, but even stronger. — Klaus Schwab

I don't think I have as many friends as I thought I did, not close ones, not many who I connect with on that deep level of language that doesn't just allow us to be ourselves with each other but allows us to be understood, even when we're not saying anything.
Silence - awkward or comfortable - is a language too. Awkward silence screams, "We have nothing in common." Comfortable silence proves just how much we do. — Erin McCahan

Like all buses, it comes when it comes. You can wait with frustations, angers or feeling of victimhoods or you can wait with patience and relaxation, either way, it won't make the bus come any way faster — Daniel Gottlieb

Happiness includes all numbers. It's infinite and eternal. — Carlos Eire

Yes!" said Fang, punching the air. "Freaks rule. — James Patterson

I actually went to film school, but I didn't like it. I'm basically self-taught. — Judah Friedlander

Embrace the faff. Stare out of the window. Bend paperclips. Stand in the middle of the room trying to remember what you came downstairs for. Pace. Drum your fingertips. Move papers around. Hum. Look at the garden. — Tom Hodgkinson

No other species flees from boredom with as much urgency as we do. We are far more eager to do brain work than we are to do physical labor. — Greg Carlson

We give our best affections to the beautiful, only our second best to the useful. — Christian Nestell Bovee

So the Sumerians worshipped Enki, and the Babylonians, who came after the
Sumerians, worshipped Marduk, his son."
"Yes, sir. And whenever Marduk got stuck, he would ask his father Enki for
help. There is a representation of Marduk here on this stele
the Code of
Hammurabi. According to Hammurabi, the Code was given to him personally by
Marduk."
Hiro wanders over to the Code of Hammurabi and has a gander. The cuneiform
means nothing to him, but the illustration on top is easy enough to understand.
Especially the part in the middle:
"Why, exactly, is Marduk handing Hammurabi a one and a zero in this picture?"
Hiro asks.
"They were emblems of royal power," the Librarian says. "Their origin is
obscure. — Neal Stephenson