Kinaesthetic Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 9 famous quotes about Kinaesthetic with everyone.
Top Kinaesthetic Quotes

Composers and musicians have always starved and, as this is a sentimental country, we think the tradition should be continued. — Thomas Beecham

It is easy to dodge our responsibilities, but we cannot dodge the consequences of dodging our responsibilities. — Josiah Stamp

We always get dressings and sauces on the side. However, we definitely like our glass of wine - or three sometimes. We order dessert but just take a few bites. I stopped buying processed foods. The hardest part is teaching this to our kids, but slowly we're making progress. — Dayna Devon

After a while, Eve thought, marriage turned walls into clear glass so both of you could see right through each other. — J.D. Robb

complaints book may be sufficient to bring about a change in — Gerald Kelly

For the Suprematist, the proper means is the one that provides the fullest expression of pure feeling and ignores the habitually accepted object. The object in itself is meaningless to him, and the ideas of the conscious mind are worthless. — Kazimir Malevich

The infant needs to develop sufficient muscle tone in order to be able to move around and stimulate this linking together. To establish tone, the infant needs to be touched, hugged, and rocked, as well as being allowed to move around freely. Such stimulation sends signals from the sense organs of the tactile, balance and kinaesthetic senses to those centres of the brain stem that regulate muscle tone. If the baby gets insufficient stimulation from these senses the tone of the extensor muscles will be low.3 This may make it difficult for the baby to lift his head and chest and move around, further reducing the stimulation from the balance, tactile and kinaesthetic senses, leading to a particularly vicious cycle of developmental delay. — Harald Blomberg

For every death is a simplification of existence for the others, removes the necessity to show gratitude, the obligation to pay visits. — Marcel Proust