Nicewicz Publications Quotes & Sayings
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Top Nicewicz Publications Quotes

So what's the big picture about our lust for sex?
We're not trying to acquire something. We want to feel something: Alive. Electrically, intensely, blazingly alive. Good. Bad. Pleasure. Pain. Bring it on
all of it.
For people who live small, I guess enough of that can be found in sex.
But for those of us who live large, the most alive we ever feel is when we're punching air with a fist, uncurling our middle finger with a cool smile, and flipping Death the big old bird. — Karen Marie Moning

Melancholy redeems this universe, and yet it is melancholy that separates us from it. — Emile M. Cioran

I wasn't feeling well in the first half. I felt down, man. I had three slices of pizza before the game and the food took me down. — Leroy Loggins

They paid the ultimate price and we can never forget their sacrifice. — Robert A. Brady

I'm not choosing, but I'm running out of fight. — Gayle Forman

Don't choose the better guy, choose the guy that's gonna make you the better girl — Chelsea Handler

Actors go, 'I just want to act.' And I say to them, 'You know, stop for a second and think about what charges you up the most. Do you want to be on the stage, do you want to be in film, do you want to be a comic actor? Do you just want to make it for the money and capitalize on your look and do commercials and soaps?' — Jason Alexander

Sometimes insight into character and dialogue means being silent. — Jeff VanderMeer

An old house is alive with ghosts. Each person that lived there made some kind of mark; if not in the choice of paint or cabinetry, then in a ding in the wall, a faucet with the handles installed backward, or a name carved out in the wallpaper behind the bed in secret. In some way, each voice that wandered its rooms whispers, "I was here. — Jessica L. Randall

I heard a rumor that I had ... left the earth — Cody Simpson

As the Inuits say, "Gifts make slaves, as whips make dogs. — Steven D. Levitt

Two Chinamen visiting Europe went to the theatre for the first time. One of them occupied himself with trying to understand the theatrical machinery, which he succeeded in doing. The other, despite his ignorance of the language, sought to unravel the meaning of the play. The former is like the astronomer, the latter the philosopher. — Arthur Schopenhauer