Funny Giving Up Smoking Quotes & Sayings
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Top Funny Giving Up Smoking Quotes
The real juice of life, whether it be sweet or bitter, is to be found not nearly so much in the products of our efforts as in the process of living itself, in how it feels to be alive. — George Leonard
I think about being married again, having a home and a wife. No one can ever be married too many times, and maybe if I keep trying I'll get it right one day. — Richard Pryor
I have a really good life and I really like it. — Jessa Crispin
Stupid thumb! Stupid boy! Step away Fallon, step away! — Toni Aleo
Whatever anybody says or does, assume positive intent. You will be amazed at how your whole approach to a person or problem becomes very different. — Indra Nooyi
The only reason [not to use] perl is that some sysadmins don't allow software that they didn't pay for. By all means, let them send me money if it makes them feel better. — Larry Wall
At some of the venues, the audience was so loud we could hardly hear what was happening on stage, which kind of threw us back to 1983, when we had very similar reactions on a much bigger scale. — Roger Andrew Taylor
Growth comes from God, to those with surrendered, yielded hearts. — Mary E. DeMuth
Human life lay foul before men's eyes, crushed to the dust beneath religion's weight. — Lucretius
In a country where the sole employer is the State, opposition means death by slow starvation. The old principle: who does not work shall not eat, has been replaced by a new one: who does not obey shall not eat. — Leon Trotsky
I should never have made a good scientist, but I should have made a perfectly adequate one. — C.P. Snow
If something - if you have a good rapport then you're friends and you're offered projects together or you discover stories together. Jennifer and I discovered this story together, and it was evident to us we would only do it with each other. — David O. Russell
Do the scary thing first, and get scared later. — Lemony Snicket
Obviously as a writer you have to reflect on why your work is provoking such hostility, because all you want to do is write your stories as best you can. You're forced to reflect on, why is my work so upsetting for people? The agenda behind it is clear. They don't want to see these people in literature. These areas of human experience [I write about] should not appear in public; we don't want to know. We know that people are in the street, that they have no money and are maybe begging, but we don't want to see them in literature. They should be swept under the carpet. — James Kelman