Filmy Dialogues Quotes & Sayings
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Top Filmy Dialogues Quotes

Once you start seeing this place for the madhouse it is, you can't stop seeing it that way. It's everywhere, everyone. It doesn't make any sense. That's not life. It can't be. I don't know what it is, but it's not life. — Jed McKenna

Now may be a good time to go on a long journey. The stars think you need to clear your head. The stars think you need to run. — Clementine Von Radics

Like looking down on a lubricious chess set, isn't it? The king moves in tiny steps, with no direction, like a drunkard trying to avoid the archer's bolt. The others work their strategies and wait for the old man to fall. He has no power, yet all power moves in his orbit and to his mad whim. Do you know there's no fool piece on the chessboard, Kent?" "Methinks the fool is the player, the mind above the moves. — Christopher Moore

A man on a horse is spiritually, as well as physically, bigger then a man on foot. — John Steinbeck

My process is thinking, thinking and thinking - thinking about my stories for a long time. — Hayao Miyazaki

It's a continual process of opening and surrender, like taking off layer after layer of clothes, — Pema Chodron

Diets don't really work & can be destructive, but if you get healthy overall (mind, body, spirit) then your weight balances naturally. — Jay Woodman

Becoming an economist was not a childhood dream of mine. — Harry Markowitz

The English criminal code, later known as the "Bloody Code," was brutal in the late 18th century. By the time the first legal reforms were enacted in 1826, 220 crimes - many of them relatively petty crimes against property as Dickens describes in the rest of the paragraph - were punishable by death. — Susanne Alleyn

For spiritual teachers, it is important not to identify with the image people inevitably have of them. — Eckhart Tolle

Unconditional love goes beyond holding on and letting go. Real love is about truth. It's about looking at what's really going on instead of the stories we tell ourselves about it. It's about being able to love someone from afar, when we need to, because we see that closeness turns us into the worst versions of ourselves. — Vironika Tugaleva

No culture in history has ever embraced moral relativism and survived. Our own culture, therefore, will either (1) be the first, and disprove history's clearest lesson, or (2) persist in its relativism and die, or (3) repent of its relativism and live. There is no other option. — Peter Kreeft