Taitetsu Quotes & Sayings
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Top Taitetsu Quotes

To die or not to die ... we really don't have a choice. We can therefore only take care of our life-body, until the fullness of time and being ends our existence on earth. — Taitetsu Unno

A week before shooting, they told me, You don't have the part, yet. We're still trying to find a handicapped kid who can act. Either that or we break your legs. — Kieran Culkin

Everyone has a button for sadness and a button for happiness, your condition depends on which one you push the most. — Debasish Mridha

Buddhism is a path of supreme optimism, for one of its basic tenets is that no human life or experience is to be wasted or forgotten, but all should be transformed into a source of wisdom and compassionate living. — Taitetsu Unno

I know of nobody that is coming, I am sure, unless Charlotte Lucas should happen to call in- and I am sure my dinners are good enough for her, since she is an unmarried woman of seven-and-twenty, and as such should expect little more than a crust of bread washed down with a cup of loneliness. — Seth Grahame-Smith

They didn't tell you?" Her voice was calm, emotionless. "Your wife died with my husband's cock in her mouth, Shadow. — Neil Gaiman

Awakening is dynamic, Constantly evolving in accordance with life's realities — Taitetsu Unno

I am here for the goal, and the goal is to try to do it again. — Pete Sampras

Hold tight to the hem of Grace and the tattered remnants of Forgiveness. I — Rachel A. Marks

The butcher seldom sees much interest in allowing the herd to be armed. — Theodore Beale

The behaviour of lovers is oscillating like the moon, and unpredictable as the weather ... — Bernd Schuster

Dharma has several connotations in South Asian religions, but in Buddhism it has two basic, interrelated meanings: dharma as 'teaching' as found in the expression Buddha Dharma, and dharma as 'reality-as-is' (abhigama-dharma). The teaching is a verbal expression of reality-as-is that consists of two aspects-the subject that realizes and the object that is realized. Together they constitute 'reality-as-is;' if either aspect is lacking, it is not reality-as-is. This sense of dharma or reality-as-is is also called suchness (tathata) or thatness (tattva) in Buddhism. — Taitetsu Unno

Filmmakers who use narrators pay a price for taking the easy way: narrated films date far more quickly than films without narrators. — Bruce Jackson