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Criselda Kananda Quotes & Sayings

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Top Criselda Kananda Quotes

Criselda Kananda Quotes By Maharishi Mahesh Yogi

Meditation is the means through which the Soul dictates and guides the mind for all good. — Maharishi Mahesh Yogi

Criselda Kananda Quotes By D.H. Lawrence

The history of the cosmos
is the history of the struggle of becoming.
When the dim flux of unformed life
struggled, convulsed back and forth upon itself,
and broke at last into light and dark
came into existence as light,
came into existence as cold shadow
then every atom of the cosmos trembled with delight. — D.H. Lawrence

Criselda Kananda Quotes By Nathan East

For me, love is an enhanced state of kindness, compassion, service, respect, and humility, an emotion I feel we are all here to give and to receive. — Nathan East

Criselda Kananda Quotes By Richard Brautigan

We were all silent except for blink, blink, blink, blink, blink. — Richard Brautigan

Criselda Kananda Quotes By Scott

Crystals have power — Scott

Criselda Kananda Quotes By Kate Jackson

I left my mark on 'Dark Shadows.' One day I was doing my lines perfectly from Act 3. Everyone else was doing Act 2. — Kate Jackson

Criselda Kananda Quotes By Malcolm X

Here I am, back in Mecca. I am still traveling, trying to broaden my mind, for I've seen too much of the damage narrow-mindedness can make of things, and when I return home to America, I will devote what energies I have to repairing the damage. — Malcolm X

Criselda Kananda Quotes By Stephen Fovargue

To explain the Use of Education, no Method can be more effectual, than to shew what dull Mistakes and silly Notions Men are apt to be led into for Want of it. These Mistakes are so numerous, that if we were to undertake to divulge all the Errors that Men of no Knowledge in the Sciences labour under, the shortest Way would be to publish a compleat System of Natural Philosophy, which Learning, as it may be acquired by reading the different Books, which have already been wrote upon that Subject, in this Aera of the Sciences, such an Undertaking would be quite needless at this Time, even supposing the Author capable of that laborious Work. If the following Sheets do but serve to divest Men of some of those unreasonable Obstinacies with which they and their Forefathers have long been prepossessed, the Time will be well laid out, both of the Writer and Reader. — Stephen Fovargue