Helenice Festas Quotes & Sayings
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Top Helenice Festas Quotes

That's what being in love looks like. I didn't have that, and I wanted it.
But then you found it.
I did, but that doesn't mean you won't. Love isn't a finite thing in the universe. It's not like it gets used up by people who got there first. — Melanie Harlow

Any gay person understands at some point that he or she has to disappear, to become invisible. That's very difficult. You somehow have to kill yourself. This is asked of people who haven't got the tools to understand that it's all a social construction, and that they shouldn't inferiorize themselves. This is asked of little kids. But I still live in the same outcome. — Abdellah Taia

It was not the Jew, of course, who invented the love poem, but the other way around. — Jonathan Safran Foer

Chapter 4. Configuring Your Jenkins Server — John Ferguson Smart

Sorrow is one of the vibrations that prove the fact of living. — Antoine De Saint-Exupery

Things are not worth attending to, yet they have to be attended to. — Laozi

My dear boy, " Miss Frost said sharply. "My dear boy, please don't put a label on me - don't make a category before you get to know me! — John Irving

If I read the word 'problematize' one more time, I'm going to vomit. — Gloria Steinem

[13] But it sometimes comes about that, when we have properly granted certain premisses, certain conclusions are derived from them that, though false, nonetheless follow from them. [14] What am I to do, then? Accept the false conclusion? [15] And how is that possible? Then should I say that I was wrong to accept the premisses? No, this isn't permissible either. Or say: That doesn't follow from the premisses? But that again isn't permissible. [16] So what is one to do in such circumstances? Isn't it the same as with debts? Just as having borrowed on some occasion isn't enough to make somebody a debtor, but it is necessary in addition that he continues to owe the money and hasn't paid off the loan; likewise, our having accepted the premisses isn't enough to make it necessary for us to accept the inference, but we have to continue to accept the premisses. [ — Epictetus