Santokh Dhillon Quotes & Sayings
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Top Santokh Dhillon Quotes

Impotent hatred is the most horrible of all emotions; one should hate nobody whom one cannot destroy. — Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

Drinking good wine with good food in good company is one of life's most civilized pleasures. — Michael Broadbent

Logic would dictate that if we really wanted to change our lives, we would just do it. Instead, we usually put off goals until next Monday. When Monday comes around, we reschedule the goal until some other time. We never feel quite prepared to start, always feeling a little short on money, time, or expertise. — Doreen Virtue

The best way to live a stress-free life is to learn how to swim in the ocean of uncertainty. — Debasish Mridha

The Jedi had always preached against forming connections, to prevent their acolytes from putting too much value in any one relationship. In so doing, they had unwittingly trained their students to be the perfect fugitives, able to cut and run at any moment. As long as they didn't stop to care, they could go on indefinitely. — John Jackson Miller

Frequently give up some of your property by giving it with a generous heart to the poor ... It is true that God will repay us not only in the next world but even in this. — Francis De Sales

I think that that integrity is something that is important to voters. — Tammy Baldwin

Stand and face me, my love,
and scatter the grace in your eyes.
— Sappho

[I]f subjects must never resist, it follows that every prince, without any effort, policy, or violence, is at once rendered absolute and uncontrollable; — David Hume

Religions have always stressed that compassion is not only central to religious life, it is the key to enlightenment and it the true test of spirituality. But there have always have been those who'd rather put easier goals, like doctrine conformity, in place. — Karen Armstrong

That man who had prayed for the fasces, when he attains them, desires to lay them aside and says over and over: "When will this year be over! — Seneca.

we think of our children as amazingly fragile and entirely moldable. Both assumptions are mistaken. It's harder to ruin our kids than we think and harder to stamp them for success than we'd like. — Kevin DeYoung