Walter Hopps Quotes & Sayings
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Top Walter Hopps Quotes

JIBO isn't an appliance, it's a companion, one that can interact and react with its human owners in ways that delight instead of disturb. — Lance Ulanoff

When you follow your bliss a kind of track opens up, that's always been there, waiting for you. And the life that you should be living, is the one that you will be living. — Joseph Campbell

Nobody is good or bad. They are either strong or weak. Strong people stick to their morals, no matter what the trials and tribulations. Weak people, many a times, do not even realise how low they have fallen. — Amish Tripathi

My love for sports will never die. I love martial arts and I want to promote it in whichever way I can. I am a fighter first, then an actor. — Akshay Kumar

Put a petty criminal in maximum security prison and he'll come out knowing how to rape and pillage. — Michelle Hodkin

Never trust the storyteller. Only trust the story. — Neil Gaiman

When no one is watching, live as if someone is. — Max Lucado

There are some things with alcohol you must never do. You must never drink alone, never drink on Sundays, never drink before seven o'clock and if you do, it has to be on a Saturday. — Per Petterson

For me, the heyday was in 1959. It was before the Ferus Gallery moved across the street, in the days when Ed Kienholz and Walter Hopps ran it. At that time, art was taken very seriously in terms of being an artist, and not as a profession. — Billy Al Bengston

She tried to walk softly and wished the trees wouldn't stare at her so. — Diane Duane

Capture a shadow, dance with the wind, stand in a rainbow, begin at the end. — Mary Anne Radmacher

There is no single way of grieving. But research suggests that there are some broad similarities among grievers. — Meghan O'Rourke

While I think the earth is warming, I don't think that man-made causes are the primary factor. — Ken Buck

Maturing as a poet means maturing as the whole man, experiencing new emotions appropriate to one's age, and with the same intensity as the emotions of youth. — T. S. Eliot