Finniel Quotes & Sayings
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Top Finniel Quotes

A woman should be like a single flower, not a whole bouquet. — Anna Held

Truth is a torch, but a huge one, and so it is only with blinking eyes what we all of us try to get past it, in actual terror of being burnt. — Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

Who you think you are is what compels you to do what you do! — Mark Driscoll

I must have been through about a million girls, I'd love 'em and leave 'em alone. I didn't care how much they'd cry. — Elvin Bishop

I picked up a harmonica and taught myself. — Sam Barry

The club is bound together by an unspoken pledge to protect the presidency; but its members are often driven by an even more fierce desire to protect a legacy — Nancy Gibbs; Michael Duffy

Happy Birthday Seaweed Brain — Rick Riordan

When we say "transformation," it means that nothing of the old has remained. Something totally new has flowered within you. Now you look at a rose plant that is full of thorns. Springtime came and rose flowers burst out - it is a transformation. The thorns are still there - there are more thorns than flowers - but we do not call it a thorn plant. We call it a rose plant because of that single rose. Everyone's attention goes more towards that single rose than a hundred thorns that are on the plant, isn't it? So all the thorns in you, maybe you cannot remove them right now, but if one rose flower blossoms, everyone is willing to overlook those things. — Jaggi Vasudev

There is not a simple gene pool entirely free of toxic waste. — Lois Greiman

It has been a long road from Plato's Meno to the present, but it is perhaps encouraging that most of the progress along that road has been made since the turn of the twentieth century, and a large fraction of it since the midpoint of the century. Thought was still wholly intangible and ineffable until modern formal logic interpreted it as the manipulation of formal tokens. And it seemed still to inhabit mainly the heaven of Platonic ideals, or the equally obscure spaces of the human mind, until computers taught us how symbols could be processed by machines. — Allen Newell