Famous Quotes & Sayings

Woodzy Motel Quotes & Sayings

Enjoy reading and share 10 famous quotes about Woodzy Motel with everyone.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Google+ Pinterest Share on Linkedin

Top Woodzy Motel Quotes

You've got one life; do all you can to fulfill your passion. Everybody is gifted with a special talent. — Vinita Kinra

I never have reservations about doing anything as long as I'm being paid. — Colin Baker

You need to be able to fill that space on your own, Maddie. You should never have to rely on another person to make you feel whole. That life is dangerous. — Katie Kacvinsky

I wanted to show that women could run, but I also wanted to kind of inspire the idea that ordinary people can run. I was like, boy, I feel so good when I run, if everybody could feel like this, this sense of joy and physical well-being and strength and autonomy you have when you run, how much better the world would be, you know? — Bobbi Gibb

Spiritual revolutionaries must be committed not to what is easiest, but to what is most beneficial to themselves and the world. — Noah Levine

The story of Warner Brothers' movie, 'Mildred Pierce,' recounts the enormous and unrewarded sacrifices that a mother (Joan Crawford) makes for her spoiled, greedy daughter (Ann Blythe). — Manny Farber

Acceptance is the embracing of what happens. Acceptance is a way of getting in touch with the deeper, timeless dimension of aware presence, simply through accepting that this is what is happening or this is what I am feeling or thinking. — Eckhart Tolle

I just think that all of us in this room should have a voice in how the USA is represented. And he don't allow us our voice, that's all I'm saying. — Eddie Vedder

If I think something is beautiful, there must be somebody out there who will agree with me. — William Kraft

As the second decade of the twenty-first century has worn on, politicians of all stripes, aware of the political power of the unmarried woman yet seemingly incapable of understanding female life outside of a marital context, have come to rely on a metaphor in which American women, no longer bound to men, are binding themselves to government. — Rebecca Traister