Chokoladen Quotes & Sayings
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Top Chokoladen Quotes

I do weights and work out different body parts on different days. I don't do cardio - I did too much in my tennis-playing days! — Luke Mitchell

The clock had been Sylvie's, and her mother's before that. It had gone to Ursula on Sylvie's death and Ursula had left it to Teddy, and so it had zigzagged its way down the family tree ...
... The clock was a good one, made by Frodsham and worth quite a bit, but Teddy knew if he gave it to Viola she would sell it or misplace it or break it and it seemed important to him that it stayed in the family. An heirloom. ('Lovely word,' Bertie said.) He liked to think that the little golden key that wound it, a key that would almost certainly be lost by Viola, would continue to be turned by the hand of someone who was part of the family, part of his blood. The red thread. — Kate Atkinson

I must create a system, or be enslaved by another man's. I will not reason and compare: my business is to create. — William Blake

People either see me or they don't. — Jennifer Niven

I believe you are one of the people that can lift the corners of the universe. — Ann M. Martin

The difference between people who succeed and people who fail, I think in many cases it's not fear. Everyone experiences fear. The difference is what do you do with your fear. Do you work to overcome it or do you let it defeat you? And I think that is actually what distinguishes very successful people from others. — Carly Fiorina

Our gifts are our weaponry, — Lois Lowry

Learn to help people with more than just their jobs: help them with their lives. — Jim Rohn

Nothing compares to the fear that you're becoming the monster in your closet. During — J.D. Vance

They did not have problems. They had been perfectly, utterly happy.
Hadn't they? — Susin Nielsen

I talked yesterday about caring, I care about these moldy old riding gloves. I smile at them flying through the breeze beside me because they have been there for so many years and are so old and so tired and so rotten there is something kind of humorous about them. They have become filled with oil and sweat and dirt and spattered bugs and now when I set them down flat on a table, even when they are not cold, they won't stay flat. They've got a memory of their own. They cost only three dollars and have been restitched so many times it is getting impossible to repair them, yet I take a lot of time and pains to do it anyway because I can't imagine any new pair taking their place. That is impractical, but practicality isn't the whole thing with gloves or with anything else. — Robert M. Pirsig