Inspirational Heedless Quotes & Sayings
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Top Inspirational Heedless Quotes

Even when things went out of control, his kisses never seemed brutal or vicious. Just ... determined. The bastard. — Shelly Laurenston

There are actually some men in the world who care more about a women's character than her physical appearance. — Jody Hedlund

You asked the Holy Spirit for a miracle, and now that you've got one you're trying to argue it away. People who don't believe in miracles shouldn't pray for them. — David Wilkerson

I think the fact is that anybody who goes into politics feels like 'I can make a difference'. But it's not one person, you need so many others. — Drew Brees

Certainly, Gandhi is not inferior to Christ in goodness and sanctity, and he surpasses him in touching humility. Gandhi is the prophet of hope in this age of pessimism and disillusionment. He is a promise of sanity in the madness induced by our world's heedless drinking at the fount of war. — Sudhir Kakar

You're only as old as your spine. — Joseph Pilates

A salad is not a meal, it is a style. — Fran Lebowitz

Being young is easy, you know, but it takes guts to be old. — Blaize Clement

We need to encourage an attitude of constant questioning, which is a genuine part of our potential as students. If students were required to drop their questions, that would create armies of zombies- rows of jellyfish ... The questioning mind is absolutely necessary. — Chogyam Trungpa

When I was 12 or 13, I realised I was good, but I never knew how far I'd get. — Facundo Pieres

Genius and madness have something in common: both live in a world that is different from that which exists for everyone else. — Arthur Schopenhauer

Why is it...that the good things that pop up almost always get clobbered by these miserable darn things that seem to choke out everything like stinkweed? — A. E. Hotchner

That was something else I owed Teddy White. I and others of my generation, who went from newspaper and magazine reporting to writing books, owed him a far greater debt of gratitude than most people realized. As much as anyone he changed the nature of nonfiction political reporting. By taking the 1960 campaign, a subject about which everyone knew the outcome, and writing a book which proved wondrously exciting to read, he had given a younger generation a marvelous example of the expanded possibilities of writing nonfiction journalism. As I worked on my own book, I remembered his example and tried to write it as a detective novel. — David Halberstam