
Top 14 Carr Gomm Quotes
#1. Modern humanity's sense of alienation lies in the fact that we have cut ourselves adrift from both the natural world and from the roots of our past.
Philip Carr-Gomm
#2. The songs of our ancestors are also the songs of our children
Philip Carr-Gomm
#3. The risks involved in the pursuit of magic are
put simply
either getting frightened by unpleasant perceptions or becoming deluded. Unfortunately it is possible to suffer from both symptoms at the same time.
Philip Carr-Gomm
#4. Well, I'm sorry my telling the truth about the stupid things you do is inconvenient for you,
John Scalzi
#5. Drink moderately, for drunkeness neither keeps a secret, nor observes a promise.
Miguel De Cervantes
#6. Lets build a happy little cloud.
Lets build some happy little trees.
Bob Ross
#7. I was weird right from the start. It's just that you can't ever expect people to get you. And I do think that really did mess with my head, being well-known young, when you really don't know who you are.
Helena Bonham Carter
#8. When we know about our ancestors, when we sense them as living and as supporting us, then we feel connected to the genetic life-stream, and we draw strength and nourishment from this.
Philip Carr-Gomm
#9. When we let go of believing we are superior, we open ourselves to the experience of living in the community of Nature.
Philip Carr-Gomm
#10. I like to make sculpture because it makes my life social. When I make drawings, I work alone. When I work with sculpture I have someone I can work with.
Camille Henrot
#11. Naturism offers a way of being that dares to suggest that who we are without any additions or covering up is all we need to be.
Philip Carr-Gomm
#12. The weightiest end of the cross of Christ that is laid upon you, lieth upon your strong Savior.
Samuel Rutherford
#13. Ultimately, the purpose of magic is to free our potential, not bind us to ideas.
Philip Carr-Gomm
#14. Men are merely on a lower or higher stage of an eminence, whose summit is God's throne infinitely above all; and there is just as much reason for the wisest as for the simplest man being discontent with his position, as respects the real quantity of knowledge he possesses.
John Ruskin
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