Mystichood Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 12 famous quotes about Mystichood with everyone.
Top Mystichood Quotes
You should never accept what can be offered to you if you feel it can be improved. — Martha Stewart
Music is a language, you see, a universal language. — Sun Ra
Say to yourself: The world is full of money. Some of it has my name on it. All I have to do is collect it. — Felix Dennis
Will slam poems and I slam doors. — Colleen Hoover
Under the mystichood ofNameless Bride, we grope in Her Sacred Darkness for plasmatic encounter, the fifth ionized state of matter. Our mundane sight of differentation and separation recedes into the magickal Abyss of Blackness where all is touch. We feel each other as tactile presences whose extended dimension stretches to the stars only to coalesce beyond galactic expanses in the white and worm-holes of Her ever spiraling Gown of Worlds beyond Worlds. Let us feel Her concrescence as we stroke each unique form in the unfathomable dimensions of Her perfect formfulness - ever-changing, ever-new, ever-variable in the rainbow myriads of infinite spasms of delight. — Lady Svetlana
If you wish to put off all worry, assume that what you fear may happen is certainly going to happen. — Alain De Botton
On Christmas morning, we always make breakfast, and everyone eats before we open any presents. I make muffins and homemade applesauce, which I don't think anyone likes as much as I do ... I just love the way it makes the house smell! — Laura Leighton
there is always a but in this imperfect world! — Anne Bronte
We remain silent because we've taken on a responsibility and/or shame that was never ours to carry. Forgive yourself for things that were not your fault. Bad decisions, mistaken trust, physical weakness, or too much fear to act do not make an assault on you or someone you care about your fault. Ever. — Tammara Webber
You'll always get an idea if you think and don't panic. — Norman Vincent Peale
You can't create life in a place that's dying by degrees. — Jodi Picoult
Our capacity to draw happiness from aesthetic objects or material goods in fact seems critically dependent on our first satisfying a more important range of emotional or psychological needs, among them the need for understanding, for love, expression and respect. — Alain De Botton
