Top 26 Challenges Rewards Quotes
#1. Life's biggest rewards come from the biggest challenges
Greg Behrendt
#2. I like children; I like 'em, and I respect 'em. Pretty much all the honest truth-telling there is in the world is done by them.
Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.
#3. The first person a customer speaks with has the greatest impact on that customer's impression of Safeway.
Steven Burd
#4. Did you hear about the dog that was so high-strung, he developed a nervous tick?
Jay Leno
#5. Time is a resource whose supply is inversely proportional to its demand.
Craig Bruce
#6. Every project has challenges, and every project has its rewards.
Stephen Schwartz
#7. The past nine years in San Diego have represented such a period of questioning.
Brian Ferneyhough
#8. I don't steer clear of genres. I simply haven't steered myself toward some of them.
Amy Tan
#9. My mom didn't want me to go to college. She didn't want me to read - when I read, I may as well have been holding a pineapple.
Lynda Barry
#10. Life is not always easy. And that is a major reason why it is so precious. Many of life's best rewards are possible only because you must work your way through difficult challenges to get to them. If everything in life were easy, there would be no opportunity for real fulfillment.
Ralph Marston
#11. Because Harvard is such a fine sound forty acres is no high price for a fine sound. A fine dead sound we will swap Benjy's pasture for a fine dead sound. It will last him a long time because he cannot hear it unless he can smell it
William Faulkner
#12. The caricature of science is that we hold tight to the theories we have, and shun challenges to them. That's just not true. In fact, we hold our highest rewards for those scientists who can prove others wrong. And by the way, they are famous in their own lifetimes. We don't wait until they're dead.
Neil DeGrasse Tyson
#13. My grandkids say, "Reality Bites." O.K., but it also challenges and rewards ... I believe our best days are yet to come.
George H. W. Bush
#14. Every project has its own challenges and rewards. If it's not challenging, why do it?
Howard Berger
#15. The weight of history swings on choices. To understand why people make the choices they do is to understand the whole of history and most of the future.
Lance Conrad
#16. Theano: Always expecting the worst, you are.
Danae: If you expect terrible things, then they don't surprise you, and all good things are like wonderful gifts.
Adele Geras
#17. We are prodding, challenging, seeking contradictions or small, persistent residual errors, proposing alternative explanations, encouraging heresy. We give our highest rewards to those who convincingly disprove established beliefs.
Carl Sagan
#18. Shall I faint, now that I have poured out the spirit of my mind to the world, and treated many subjects with truth, with freedom, with power, because I have been followed with one cry of abuse ever since for not being a Government tool?
William Hazlitt
#19. One doesn't accept bad challenges. Part of it is always the risk-taking without seeing that the risks are rational and the rewards are commensurate.. are more than commensurate.. with the risks.
Sumner Redstone
#20. How could a merchant lead people? Did not merchants have to focus on their wares? It was ridiculous.
Robert Jordan
#23. Life isn't supposed to be easy. Ever. But with the hardest challenges go the greatest rewards. And every incredible moment of my life came only after I did something that made my gut clench with fear.
Sherrilyn Kenyon
#24. Since any effort always translates into more learning about a particular subject, we logically believe that we can determine our success in a linear fashion, but this doesn't happen because our self-image always filters our perception of reality.
Robin Sacredfire
#25. Rich, famous, insider journalists do not want to subvert the status quo that so lavishly rewards them. Like all courtiers, they are eager to defend the system that vests them with their privileges and contemptuous of anyone who challenges that system.
Glenn Greenwald
#26. At a time when the public is sour on politicians, have no use for them, Bill Clinton has risen to a different level. Bill Clinton is endlessly interesting.
Mark Shields