Limonia Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 12 famous quotes about Limonia with everyone.
Top Limonia Quotes
Some goals are not going to fulfill you. Choose goals that you value and care about. — Henry Cloud
We can let our goals motivate and inspire us, but we don't want to let them determine our happiness or self worth. — Elaina Marie
Freedom is not the absence of obligation or restraint, but the freedom of movement within healthy, chosen parameters. — Kristin Armstrong
No Ranger in sight. That's because he's in the wind. You can't see the wind. Or maybe the wind went home to watch Tuesday night fights. — Janet Evanovich
Marcone's scum, but he's his own scum -Harry Dresden — Jim Butcher
So when I got to 50 I just thought, Hold on: I'm thin. I've got my hair. I'm well off. I survived, you know. — Bob Geldof
Flea stared at us, I can't decide what's worse. Losing family members or not having a family member to lose. — Maria V. Snyder
I learned that you have to respect how much time and work a writer has put into their book. I always give the writer I'm publishing a good deal of control in shaping the book and figuring out how it looks, but I'll make suggestions on how to make it stronger. — Kevin Sampsell
When I today ask myself whence I got the moral courage, for it takes moral courage to make a move (or form a plan) running counter to all tradition, I think I may say in answer, that it was only my intense preoccupation with the problem of the blockade which helped me to do so. — Aron Nimzowitsch
But what you could perhaps do with in these days is a word of most sincere sympathy. Your movement is carried internally by so strong a truth and necessity that victory in one form or another cannot elude you for long. — Hjalmar Schacht
God will probably allow us to ask questions about and discover some of the things we've always been curious about. Isn't it marvelous to think about how we will be able to actually meet and talk to people who lived throughout history? — David Berg
The larger the ego, the less the need for other egos around. The more modest, humble, and self-effacing we feel, the more we suffer from solitude, feeling ourselves inadequate company. — Barbara Holland
