Incarnez Quotes & Sayings
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Top Incarnez Quotes

Loneliness is like sitting in an empty room and being aware of the space around you. It is a condition of separateness. Solitude is becoming one with the space around you. It is a condition of union. Loneliness is small, solitude is large. Loneliness closes in around you; solitude expands toward the infinite. Loneliness has its roots in words, in an internal conversation that nobody answers; solitude has its roots in the great silence of eternity. — Kent Nerburn

I have been a lifelong Democrat. Like all ideas, though, the Democrat ideas need to be dynamic. It needs to be kept current. — Robert M. Pirsig

all information and interruptions that are irrelevant, unimportant, or unactionable. — Timothy Ferriss

It is the character of lived experience I want to explore, not the nature of man. — Michael James Jackson

Why buy good luggage? You only use it when you travel. — Yogi Berra

There is more security in self-denial, mortification, and other like virtues, than in an abundance of tears. — Teresa Of Avila

I was born in 1935. But my mother and father - who were immigrants from Ireland - and everybody that I knew growing up in Brooklyn came out of the Depression, and they were remarkable people. — Pete Hamill

Piety softens all that courage bears. — Sophie Swetchine

The more propaganda ... conservatives spread for capitalist economics while at the same time preaching collectivism morally and philosophically , the more nails they'll drive into capitalism's coffin. — Ayn Rand

It is your responsibility to change the society if you think yourself as an educated person — James Baldwin

By identifying with the powerful, the disempowered achieve a measure of safety, at least for a moment. By doing the bidding of those in power, they become a necessary part of the system, useful so long as they serve to contain the stirrings and strivings of the oppressed. By making the rules and values of their oppressor their own, they separate themselves from the rest of their group and, temporarily at least, assuage the pain of their stigmatized status. — Lillian B. Rubin