Related Quotes
destiny may way
I do not know what your destiny may be, but I do know this, that not one of you will find the happiness that each of you is seeking until you have first sought and found a way in which to unselfishly serve others. Albert Schweitzer
destiny enemies love thine
Love thine enemies because they are the instruments to your destiny. Joseph Campbell
destiny essence flavor forehead lord name satisfied sublime written
One who obtains the Sublime Essence of the Lord is satisfied and fulfilled. One who obtains this Flavor of the Lord does not waver. One who has this destiny written on his forehead obtains the Name of the Lord, Har, Har. Granth Sahib
destiny fate maybe
Maybe fate and destiny is on my side, Paul McGinley
destiny execute help structure
Now that we've done all this, our destiny is in our hands. It's up to us to perform. This new structure will help us better execute our strategy. Sidney Taurel
destiny hands rights
The destiny of human rights is in the hands of all our citizens in all our communities. Eleanor Roosevelt
destiny self keys
Choice is the key, because human beings are the only creatures who can choose to evolve, who can shape their destiny. Furthermore, we have been given the gift of "self-awareness," which allows us to step back into our true selves to observe and use our brains to create the world we wish to live in. Deepak Chopra
destiny coincidence signals
Coincidences are not accidents but signals from the universe which can guide us toward our true destiny. Deepak Chopra
destiny atoms cosmos
Just by being ourselves we are borne toward a destiny far beyond anything we could imagine. It is enough to know that the being I nourish inside me is the same as the Being that suffuses every atom of the cosmos. Deepak Chopra
needs work
Much work still needs to be done but nothing can take away from this victory, ... day of joy. Mahmud Abbas
needs work
Much work needs to be done in this area. Neal Cohen
needs
No! No! ... That's my son. He needs to come with me. Let him come with me. Jon Moore
needs open
My 97-year-old grandmother needs to be able to open this. Ken Hoyt
needs wash
My hair is like flat baby hair after I wash it, so it needs something in it to get that 'day after' texture. Suki Waterhouse
needs people talk talking
needs to go talk to some of the people I'm talking to. Bennie Thompson
needs season zone
needs to get in the end zone before the season begins. Cedrick Wilson
needs reason voters
needs a narrative, a reason that voters should give him a look. George Edwards
needs being-true known
But the truth doesn't need to be known, or believed, to be true. Chris Crutcher
stories whole
We can’t always tell the whole story about ourselves. Denis Johnson
stories four philippines
I didnt finish the stories until we went to the Philippines and I got malaria. I couldnt work and I didnt have any money, but I had seven stories. So I wrote three or four more. Denis Johnson
stories seekers
You will observe that the stories told are all about money-seekers, not about money-finders. Edgar Allan Poe
stories may faces
About the only value the story of my life may have is to show that one can, even without any particular gifts, overcome obstacles that seem insurmountable if one is willing to face the fact that they must be overcome. Eleanor Roosevelt
stories speak shoulders
So many stories, and to choose which ones to tell and how to tell them. The words, they will tap me on the shoulder and they will speak to me: Tell me! Tell me! The stories choose me. Eduardo Galeano
stories pages way
I HATED the Salinger story. It took me days to go through it, gingerly, a page at a time, and blushing with embarrassment for him every ridiculous sentence of the way. How can they let him do it? Elizabeth Bishop
stories sad-story
A lot of sad stories in a row - that wears on you. Elizabeth Edwards
stories short-story experiments
every short story is an experiment - what one must ask is not only, did it come off, but was it, as an experiment, worth making? Elizabeth Bowen
stories action ends
Story involves action. Action towards an end not to be foreseen (by the reader) but also towards an end which, having been reached, must be seen to have been from the start inevitable. Elizabeth Bowen