Paranoiac Personality Quotes & Sayings
Enjoy reading and share 14 famous quotes about Paranoiac Personality with everyone.
Top Paranoiac Personality Quotes
Concentrate on your task. — Mahatma Gandhi
The only ones who fly are the one who dare to fly. — Luis Sepulveda
Now, where does my comedy come from, like, as a human being? Yeah, when I was a kid I was dyslexic and had to go to special-ed every day and felt stupid about that and got very witty to defend myself. — Dax Shepard
I think a Celebrity Survivor would be great. — Kathy Griffin
You look like Curran. You have that pissy exasperated look on your face. — Ilona Andrews
Damn! I thought, furious that even after expending my only rocket, I couldn't get the machine pistol; I was right back where I started, except one rocket lighter. I had squandered my gift! I felt like the guy who found a lamp that would grant one wish, and he says, "Jeez, I wish I knew what to wish for." I — Dafydd Ab Hugh
I wanted to bring people together, and most importantly not feel threatened when they came to watch me box. — Barry McGuigan
Respectful teenagers are developed when they are 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5, not at 13, 14, 15, or 16. — Tedd Tripp
The audience requires not information but drama. — David Mamet
It's sometimes hard to avoid losing. Nobody's going to win all the time. — Haruki Murakami
Because you wear a uniform, a smelly uniform ... and so you think you can be rude to me. — Morrissey
We are all born innocent. It doesn't last long. — Peter James West
The most fundamental decision we all face over the course of our lives is what we will recognize as the ultimate reality, the uncaused source and cause of our existence. Everything else in our worldview depends on that initial decision. The Bible speaks of this foundational choice in terms of who or what we worship. We must all answer the challenge Joshua issued to the Israelites as they were poised to enter the Promised Land: "Choose this day whom you will serve" (Josh. 24:15). — Nancy Pearcey
I was screaming with joy because the battle calm had come, the same blessed stillness I had felt at Cynuit. It is a joy, that feeling, and the only other joy to compare is that of being with a woman.
It is as though life slows. The enemy moves as if he is wading in mud, but I was kingfisher fast. There is rage, but it is a controlled rage, and there is joy, the joy that the poets celebrate when they speak of battle, and a certainty that death is not in that day's fate. My head was full of singing, a keening note, high and shrill, death's anthem. All I wanted was for more Danes to come to SerpentBreath and it seemed to me that she took on her own life in those moments. — Bernard Cornwell
