Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Many of life's failures are people who did not realize how close they were to success when they gave up.
Success and failure are both part of life. Both are not permanent.
I expect either total success or total failure. That's my lot in life.
Life is nothing but a bunch of experiences. There's no such thing as success or failure.
We are human beings, at the end of the day. Success and failure are a part and parcel of our life.
Success is due to our stretching to the challenges of life. Failure comes when we shrink from them.
Life is bigger than cinema. Cinema is just a part of life, so I never take success or failure seriously.
Life is like a circle and you have to know when to move on. Success and failure are a part and parcel of it.
I'm quite detached from failure and success. Once a shooting is done, I kind of close that chapter in my life.
The success or failure of a life, as far as posterity goes, seems to lie in the more or less luck of seizing the right moment of escape.
We all learn lessons in life. Some stick, some don't. I have always learned more from rejection and failure than from acceptance and success.
Sometimes you learn more from failure than you do from success, and in some ways it's better to have failure at the beginning of your career, or your life.
I'm sure there are many more people who can identify with failure and hardship in life than with the success of an Alexander Hamilton or a John D. Rockefeller.
Sound character provides the power with which a person may ride the emergencies of life instead of being overwhelmed by them. Failure is... the highway to success.
The first week in intelligence school, you learn there are only two conditions in life. There is policy success, or there is intel failure. There is no other condition in life.
The key to accepting responsibility for your life is to accept the fact that your choices, every one of them, are leading you inexorably to either success or failure, however you define those terms.
Regard every suggestion that your life may be a failure, that you are not made like those who succeed, and that success is not for you, as a traitor, and expel it from your mind as you would a thief from your house.
In Britain, by contrast, we still think that class plays a part in determining a person's life chances, so we're less inclined to celebrate success and less inclined to condemn failure. The upshot is that it's much easier to be a failure in Britain than it is in America.
Coding, it's an endless process of trial and error, of trying to get the right command in the right place, with sometimes just a semicolon making the difference between success and failure. Code breaks and then it falls apart, and it often takes many, many tries until that magical moment when what you're trying to build comes to life.