Stochlinaya Quotes & Sayings
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Top Stochlinaya Quotes

From a very early age I had imbibed the opinion that it was every man's duty to do all that lay in his power to leave his country as good as he had found it. — William Cobbett

categorical imperative that it is with you. You think first of getting the biggest possible output in the shortest possible time. We think first of human beings and their satisfactions. Changing jobs doesn't make for the biggest output in the fewest days. But most people like it better than doing one kind of job all their lives. If it's a choice between mechanical efficiency and human satisfaction, we choose satisfaction. — Aldous Huxley

I have a past, okay? And you really don't want to get involved with it.'
'Everybody's got a past,' he said. 'That doesn't mean you can't have a future. — Meredith Russo

If I had the luxury of working as a full time writer, I think you would see novels appearing on a much more regular, and frequent, basis. — John Scott

Many a man who thinks to found a home discovers that he has merely opened a tavern for his friends. — Norman Douglas

We are in desperate need of a well-done romantic lesbian comedy. — Jill Bennett

The idea of becoming an entrepreneur is something that is not taught very well in school and is something that people should try to do earlier on. — Peter Thiel

Obviously, my daughter's my priority, so if you want to have plans with me and then my daughter calls, then I'm going to have to go with her. — Juan Pablo Galavis

You affect your subconscious mind by verbal repetition. — W. Clement Stone

There are two kinds of creation myths: those where life arises out of the mud, and those where life falls from the sky. In this creation myth, computers arose from the mud, and code fell from the sky. — George Dyson

If you wish to live in peace and harmony with others, you must learn to discipline yourself in many ways. — Thomas A Kempis

Fyodor Pavlovich, for example, began with practically nothing, was a landowner of the very least important category, went trotting around other people's dinner tables, aspired to the rank of sponge, but at the moment of his decease turned out to possess something to the tune of one hundred thousand roubles in ready money. And yet at the same time he had persisted all his life in being one of the most muddle-headed madcaps in the whole of our district. I repeat: here there was no question of stupidity; the bulk of these madcaps are really quite sharp and clever - but plain muddle-headedness, and, moreover, of a peculiar, national variety. — Fyodor Dostoyevsky

The move to creating stories was a natural progression for me, but the most pivotal time was probably in 6th grade: That year, a friend introduced me to the stories of Ray Bradbury, and a student teacher introduced me to creative writing. — Lynn Flewelling