Famous Quotes & Sayings

Hennegan Florence Quotes & Sayings

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Top Hennegan Florence Quotes

Hennegan Florence Quotes By R. Kelly

When I first came in the business, I had a couple of close calls on planes going to London for shows. There was one time where the plane had to fly around until a storm ended, and then we started having a question about fuel, so we had to go through the storm. It was the worst thing that ever happened in my life. That really messed me up. — R. Kelly

Hennegan Florence Quotes By Dan Marino

When I look at tricks, I look at Michael Vick. — Dan Marino

Hennegan Florence Quotes By Brunello Cucinelli

To me, the simplest things can have the highest value. — Brunello Cucinelli

Hennegan Florence Quotes By Kurt Angle

I hear your chants. I hear your cat calls. And yes it's true. I'm obsessed with other men's balls. WORD! — Kurt Angle

Hennegan Florence Quotes By Carol Rifka Brunt

You can build a whole world around the tiniest of touches. — Carol Rifka Brunt

Hennegan Florence Quotes By Lyndon B. Johnson

He's got great vision. If he can get outside, he can take it all the way. That's what we were worried about. — Lyndon B. Johnson

Hennegan Florence Quotes By Stephan Pastis

Thomas, my 15-year-old, is effectively my editor, I've always trusted his voice, more than anybody, on the strip for years. He has one of those ears that's just tuned to the rhythm of humor, so if he says something's not funny, my stomach just hurts because I know he's right, and it's already been drawn. — Stephan Pastis

Hennegan Florence Quotes By Donna Leon

Lampedusa had it right - things had to seem to change so that things could remain the same. — Donna Leon

Hennegan Florence Quotes By Jennifer Morrison

The big scandal was when I was in seventh grade and I modeled a bathing suit. Everybody freaked out! — Jennifer Morrison

Hennegan Florence Quotes By Ernest Becker

Freud has said in Totem and Taboo that acts that are illegal for the individual can be justified in another way: the one who initiates the act takes upon himself both the risk and the guilt. The result is truly magic: each member of the group can repeat the act without guilt. They are not responsible, only the leader is. Redl calls this, aptly, "priority magic." But it does something even more than relieve guilt: it actually transforms the fact of murder. This crucial point initiates us directly into the phenomenology of group transformation of the everyday world. If one murders without guilt, and in imitation of the hero who runs the risk, why then it is no longer murder: it is "holy aggression. For the first one it was not." In other words, participation in the group redistills everyday reality and gives it the aura of the sacred-just as, in childhood, play created a heightened reality. — Ernest Becker