Derailment Psychology Quotes & Sayings
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Top Derailment Psychology Quotes
Giving back feeds the heart; paying forward feeds the soul. — Lora Lindy
I know it may sound silly, but I think my short stories have a life and identity of their own. They crop up in all sorts of places. — Morley Callaghan
He looked up at Stig and Hal. 'Told you this one was a keeper.' Lydia flushed as the two boys smiled. 'Shut up. You make sure you do your stuff with those two overgrown dinner bowls you call shields. — John Flanagan
Let me repeat with quite force: I was, and still am, despite mes malheurs, an exceptionally handsome male; slow moving tall, with dark soft hair and a gloomy but all the more seductive cast of demeanour. — Vladimir Nabokov
Got more milky syllables than alphabet cereals. — Keith Murray
Stared into my eyes as if searching for a coin she had dropped into a shallow pond. — Haruki Murakami
The only way to beat the competition is to stop trying to beat the competition — W.Chan Kim
I thought of all the hardships and people that I had lost in the past few days alone, but, most of all, I thought of how I didn't regret any of it. — Shannon A. Thompson
your first idea is unlikely to be the best, so you should be optimising for speed of iteration rather than quality of prototype. — Adrian McEwen
If you look at little kids and wild animals, these are two groups of things that whenever I'm with them forces me to be in the moment. — Dominic Monaghan
However, come, let's go, the world's turned gray And chilly, evening mists are rising, At nightfall it's indoors you want to be. 1170 But why should you stand still, astonished, staring? What can you see in the dusk to find upsetting? — Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
It was like I'd climbed Everest, had the summit in my sight, the flag in my hand, all ready to pierce it into the top of the mountain and say, "Whoopdedoo, I made it," and then an avalanche from out of nowhere swept me right back to the bottom of the mountain again. Was it worth bothering to try and climb it again? I was exhausted. I'd already climbed it. I didn't want to...but, then, what other choice was there? — Holly Bourne
