Repurposes An Old Quotes & Sayings
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I used to say to myself, 'Well, in the old days everybody danced because they loved to dance, and there was none of this professional garbage going on about how much can you get for this or that or the other, or any of the kinds of things that insecurity can sometimes promote. Sometimes it's for the wrong reasons.' — Twyla Tharp
More than jealousy or possessiveness pettiness kills love. — Marty Rubin
No one is able to enjoy such feast than the one who throws a party in his own mind. — Selma Lagerlof
This is a Southern gift, isn't it - tremendous self-regard diluted with humor and modesty. That's what they mean by Southern charm, right? — Michael Cunningham
There is no end to grief. Nor no end to poetry. — Babette Deutsch
A beginning is the time for taking the most delicate care that the balances are correct. — Frank Herbert
Are we all, at heart, just Internet trolls? — Sarah Lotz
Being happy is not the only happiness. — Alice Walker
The fact is that in too many parts of our country, we still have discrimination. And affirmative action is not just something that applies to people of color. Some people have a mistaken view of it in America. It also is with respect to women, it's with respect to other efforts to try to reach out and be inclusive in our country. — John F. Kerry
Those of us in the first American generations have had to figure out how the invisible world the emigrants built around our childhoods fits in solid America. — Maxine Hong Kingston
Employers need to recognize that the world has changed and there are people who would like to help them provide solution in ways that are new, modern and that add value to companies. — Andy Stern
Even fools say something worthwhile now and again. Even a blind pig finds an acorn sometimes. — Robert Jordan
The best guide in life is strength. — Swami Vivekananda
'Reedlike, that's what Hedy Kiesler is, sweet and reedlike, and when she wants to talk to you she doesn't lean over your shoulder and arch herself out behind like a debutante ... She leans back from you [and] takes a good look in your eyes and a firm grip on your name before she will allow herself to say a word.' — Richard Rhodes
