Manorexia Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 13 famous quotes about Manorexia with everyone.
Top Manorexia Quotes

Proper stance and movement are obviously genetically old, environment-resistant behaviours. Misuse, with all its psychosomatic or, rather, somato-psychic consequences, must therefore be considered a result of modern living conditions - of a culturally determined stress. — Nikolaas Tinbergen

Ambition is torment enough for an enemy; for it affords as much discontentment in enjoying as in want, making men like poisoned rats, which, when they have tasted of their bane, cannot rest till they drink, and then can much less rest till they die — Joseph Hall

One of the great joys of life is creativity. Information goes in, gets shuffled about, and comes out in new and interesting ways. — Peter McWilliams

In terms of conditioning and lifting weights, if you can't do that on your own, you're in trouble anyways. You're a professional, you have to get that done yourself. — Kerry Rhodes

I'm not sure there's a difference between books that affected the way I see the world and books that influenced me as a writer. — Steve Erickson

The quality of your mind depends on the quality of your thought — Okorie Deborah

I'd love to hear what confident, intelligent women in the industry have to say: Rachel McAdams, Carey Mulligan, Angelina Jolie, Kristen Wiig and Tina Fey. I would stand in line all day for that panel. — Nina Dobrev

You're a grown woman, and a clever one. I believe you understand the situation. And I'm going to trust that you know your own mind. — Tessa Dare

Make it like a sunflower. — Steve Jobs

Even before Sputnik, scientists and policy makers worried that not enough Americans were studying science. — Virginia Postrel

As long as you keep one foot in the real world while the other foot's in a fairy tale, that fairy tale is going to seem kind of attainable. — Aaron Sorkin

Behind the perfection of a man's style, must lie the passion of a man's soul. — Oscar Wilde

If our hours were all serene, we might probably take almost as little note of them as the dial does of those that are clouded. — William Hazlitt