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Macwell Hoffman Quotes & Sayings

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Top Macwell Hoffman Quotes

Macwell Hoffman Quotes By Shane McAnally

I wake up every day thinking, 'I just can't do it anymore.' There's nothing left to say, and I'm completely dry. And then I get in the room with somebody and they say the right thing, and I'm on again. — Shane McAnally

Macwell Hoffman Quotes By Ken Wilber

There is a phrase for this that has become quite common: "I'm spiritual but not religious." Polls show that some 20 percent of Americans identify overall with that phrase. And some polls have shown that, in the younger generation - those between eighteen and twenty-nine - this percentage explodes to an astonishing 75 percent!2 In other words, three out of four young individuals have a deep spiritual yearning that no existing religion is addressing. — Ken Wilber

Macwell Hoffman Quotes By Misty Copeland

In a ballet company, you're trying to create unison and uniform when you're in a cour de ballet. — Misty Copeland

Macwell Hoffman Quotes By Tommy Chong

Well, I had an after hours club in Vancouver and when any of the Motown acts would call. — Tommy Chong

Macwell Hoffman Quotes By Jonathan Safran Foer

It's the tragedy of loving, you can't love anything more than something you miss. — Jonathan Safran Foer

Macwell Hoffman Quotes By David Ogilvy

If you can't advertise yourself, what hope do you have of advertising anything else? — David Ogilvy

Macwell Hoffman Quotes By Anne Frank

Could spend hours telling you about the suffering the war has brought, but I'd only make myself more miserable. All we can do is wait, as calmly as possible, for it to end. Jews and Christians alike are waiting, the whole world is waiting, and many are waiting for death. — Anne Frank

Macwell Hoffman Quotes By Alan W. Watts

So long as the sense of the observing subject remains, there is the effort, however indirect, to control feeling from the outside, which is resistance setting up turmoil in the stream. Resistance disappears and the balancing process comes into full effect not by intention on the part of the subject, but only as it is seen that the feeling of being the subject, the ego, is itself part of the stream of experience and does not stand outside it in a controlling position. In — Alan W. Watts