Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I don't say that I never feel fear before a performance, but I have learned to channel it.
I have learned and dismantled all the words in order to draw from them a single word: Home.
Well, I was 29 years old when I came to the United States Senate, and I have learned a lot.
I have learned that the fear and discomfort around there not being enough money is internal.
I have learned to hold all things loosely, so God will not have to pry them out of my hands.
I have learned that keeping my personal life outside of work is the easier, richer way to work.
I have learned that one cannot truly know hope unless he has found out how like despair hope is.
The biggest thing I've learned is to listen to my own gut. I have learned to trust my instincts.
I have learned that you're only relevant to someone if you're beneficial to them somehow/some way
Honestly, you have to take care of yourself. That's probably something I have learned on the road.
I have learned a lot about myself and come to deal with a lot of things that, at first, bothered me.
This is the philosophy of nonviolence that I have learned from Gandhi, Bacha Khan and Mother Teresa.
I have learned that if this is what I am going to do, and do it well, then I have to avoid drinking.
I have learned through time that not everyone is interested in the kinds of things that fascinate me.
I have learned that the place where I subsist is all places, and the space I occupy is all intervals.
I have learned this: it is not what one does that is wrong, but what one becomes as a consequence of it.
You cannot make someone love you. All you can do is be someone who can be loved. The rest is up up them.
The greatest thing that I have learned is probably the simplest thing any of us can learn: I am who I am.
I have learned to acknowledge and appreciate the 98% that I have achieved instead of the 2% that I didn't.
I have learned not to do predictions. It's not helpful, psychologically. I don't sit and fret about things.
One thing I have learned is that I should trust my 'gut' instincts. Ultimately, only we know what is best for us.
I have learned, as I wrote, that history must be discovered, not declared. It's an admission that one grows in life.
When I have learned to love God better than my earthly dearest, I shall love my earthly dearest better than I do now.
I've learned a couple of things. And one of the things I have learned is that every experience has pluses and minuses.
My father is an absolute inspiration and such a gifted filmmaker. I have learned and continue to learn so much from him.
I have learned more [from Balzac] than from all the professional historians, economists, and statisticians put together.
I have learned to enjoy the ups for what they are, because those are the moments that feel like they go by the quickest.
I have learned the truth of the observation that the more one approaches great men the more one finds that they are men.
If I have learned one thing in life, it is never to take any man's own estimate of himself. He could very well be mistaken.
I do some of my stunts for the things I have learned. But if it is for something I have never learned, then I use a double.
I have learned that one should say "Peace!" to those who shout their hatred for one's being and presence or at one's passage.
I have learned more from Hayek than from any other living thinker, except perhaps Alfred Tarski - but not even excepting Russell.
What I have learned about the sport of cycling is that you have to love it to do it because you're not going to retire off of it.
What I have learned in my life and work is that the more I am able to be myself, the more it enables other people to be themselves.
The biggest thing I have learned is you can't take anything for granted. You have to work as hard as you can every night, regardless.
If there is one thing I have learned during my years as a professional, it is that the only thing constant about golf is its inconstancy.
One thing I have learned in my time in politics is that if one of the parties is shameless, the other party cannot afford to be spineless.
What I have learned the most is that women have always been integral to shaping America; they just haven't been recognized across all fields.
Listen, I have been educated. I have learned about Western Civilization. Do you know What the message of Western Civilization is? I am alone.
I have learned yet again (this has been going on all my life) what folly it is to take any thing for granted without examining it skeptically.
I have learned to be steady in my course of love, or fear, or loneliness, rather than impulsive in its wasting, either lyrically or emotionally.
The only thing I have learned is to find strength in yourself. No one can help you, no one can do anything for you, you have to do the work yourself.
Basically when I'm walking I'm not consciously writing or intending anything. In the manner I have learned from meditation practice, I let things unfold.
A poem is not an expression, nor is it an object. Yet it somewhat partakes of both. What a poem is is never to be known, for which I have learned to be grateful.
I have learned that if you must leave a place that you have lived in and loved and where all your yesterdays are burried deep-leave it anyway except a slow way, leave it the fastest way you can.
I have always seen the United States as a force of good. And I have learned that there is the idealistic part about what we can do at the U.N. and there is a doable part. And I have learned what is more doable.
I have learned one thing, because I get treated very unfairly, that's what I call it, the fake media. And the fake media is not all of the media. You know some tried to say that the fake media was all the media, no. Sometimes they're fake, but the fake media is only some of the media. It bears no relationship to the truth.
I'm a product of a Notre Dame education; those professors taught me a lot about how you separate the city of God from the state. I'm also a reverent follower of the tradition of Thomas Jefferson. My years of public life have simply confirmed the intensity of my belief that what I have learned from Joe Evans and Thomas Jefferson was correct.
I have never seen myself as an alarmist but rather as a scientist with a critical viewpoint, and in that sense I have always been a skeptic. I have devoted most of my career to developing models for predicting the weather, and in doing so I have learned the importance of validating forecasts against observed weather. As a result, that's an approach I strongly favor for "climate predictions." It's essential to validate model results, especially when dealing with complex systems such as the climate. It's essential do so properly if such predictions are to be considered credible.