Kampermann Quotes & Sayings
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Top Kampermann Quotes

By marrying to soon, many individuals sacrifice their chance to struggle through this purgatory of solitude and search toward a greater sense of self-confidence. They glance at the world outside the family and with hardly a second thought grasp anxiously for a partner. In marriage they seek a substitute for the security of the family of origin and an escape from aloneness. What they do not realize is that moving so quickly from one family to another, they make it easy to transfer to the new marriage all their difficult experiences in the family of origin. — Augustus Y. Napier

Maybe pretty women were always funny but only now decided to go into comedy, — Patricia Marx

I had not suffered enough to find the rage in my guts I needed to struggle to death for my freedom. — Ingrid Betancourt

There is a Greek word that is called "Praxis" and that means the integration of your beliefs with your behavior. — John Assaraf

No new world without a new language. — Ingeborg Bachmann

I always feel a little blue when a fun trip is over. The planning and anticipation of a vacation, and then the trip itself, are always so much fun. Getting home and back to real life always makes me feel a little empty. — Karey White

I was at a loss suddenly; but conscious all the while of how Armand listened; that he listened in the way that we dream of others listening, his face seeming to reflect on every thing said. He did not start forward to seize on my slightest pause, to assert an understanding of something before the thought was finished, or to argue with a swift, irresistible impulse
the things which often make dialogue impossible.
And after a long interval he said, 'I want you. I want you more than anything in the world. — Anne Rice

College professors have two bad traits. They are logical
and they are easily flattered. — Gertrude Stein

It is telling that the first recorded name in history belongs to an accountant, rather than a prophet, a poet or a great conqueror.1 — Yuval Noah Harari

Brought with it amorphous longings, shapeless desires, brief imaginary glints of other lives she could be living, — Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

After Sade, violence, life and death, desire, and sexuality will extend, below the level of representation, an immense expanse of darkness, which we are now attempting to recover ... in our discourse, in our freedom, in our thought. — Michel Foucault