Takana Zion Quotes & Sayings
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Top Takana Zion Quotes

I was afraid that letting their love in my heart would replace some of the pain I was feeling. I didn't want to let go of my pain - I wanted to own every single ounce of it - but I've worn my pain like a badge of honor for far too long. It's time for me to let the love in and the pain out. — A.D. McCammon

She had just enough time to take in a breath, to blink, to part her lips before he took them with his own. — Kelly Creagh

You may want the alpha, but the alpha has his pick. — Donna Lynn Hope

From the shadow of domes in the city of domes,
A snowflake, a blizzard of one, weightless, entered your room
And made its way to the arm of the chair where you, looking up
From your book, saw it the moment it landed. That's all
There was to it. — Mark Strand

Computers are very powerful tools, but in the simulated world of the computer, everything has to be calculated. — Margaret Wertheim

That said, a fireball like the one hurtling towards us was worthy of the utmost respect. To adopt the jargon of commercial managers, this was a Premium-Class Fireball. Speaking in poetic terms, it was a Tsar-Fireball. A biologist would have said it was an Alpha-Fireball. As a cool, calculating mathematician might have remarked, it was a fireball with a diameter of about three metres.
It was a fireball fearsome enough to make you shit yourself! — Sergei Lukyanenko

My style of music is the great American songbook meets the pop world of the Seventies and Eighties. — Barry Manilow

What are you doing tonight?" he asked, as soon as I was sitting down.
"Nothing," I said. I had what most people would call a boring social life, a classical holdout in a punk rock world. — E.K. Johnston

One of course is to insure greater supply of energy for California's needs now and in the future in the sense that we are in discussions with representatives of Oregon and Washington, where they do have a surplus supply of energy available, and at what we hope will be a very reasonable price. — George Deukmejian

A good-for-America immigration policy would not accept people with no job skills. It would not accept immigrants' elderly relatives, arriving in wheelchairs. It would not accept people accused of terrorism by their own countries. It would not accept pregnant women whose premature babies will cost taxpayers $50,000 a pop,1 before even embarking on a lifetime of government support. It would not accept Somalis who spent their adult lives in a Kenyan refugee camp and then showed up with five children in a Minnesota homeless shelter. — Ann Coulter

At the end of the day
all we ever need is
something
that helped
pass the time
and something
that keeps time from passing. — Sanober Khan