Top 16 Dry Plants Quotes
#1. It just be life, that's all. Ain't nothin' happened to you, ain't happened to most women whether they care to admit it or not. You strong, Babygirl. You a woman. You gotta be.
Marilyn Fullen-Collins
#3. Acting is like roller skating. Once you know how to do it, it is neither stimulating nor exciting.
George Sanders
#5. Everything that happens to the poor, the meek, the desolate, the mourners, the despised, happens to Christ.
Thomas Merton
#6. The living are soft and yielding; the dead are rigid and stiff. Living plants are flexible and tender; the dead are brittle and dry.
Laozi
#7. My mother, as a girl, had remembered this woman from Maine, someone who was part of the extended family somehow, and I recall her talking about this great, risk-taking woman. There are the most amazing, heroic stories in everybody's lives.
Patricia MacLachlan
#9. During an earthquake it sometimes happens that fresh springs break out in dry places which water and quicken the land so that plants can grow. In the same way the shattering experiences of suffering can cause the living water to well up in a human heart.
Sadhu Sundar Singh
#10. Being business minded requires you to always approach things with humility and respect.
Strive Masiyiwa
#11. Man, when living, is soft and tender; when dead, he is hard and tough. All animals and plants when living are tender and delicate; when dead they become withered and dry. Therefore it is said: the hard and tough are parts of death; the soft and tender are parts of life.
Laozi
#12. How far can they travel before you lose them?" Kiral asked the shaman, who seemed puzzled by the question.
Anthony Ryan
#13. I do not know if God is a mathematician, but mathematics is the loom upon which God weaves the fabric of the universe....The fact that reality can be described or approximated by simple mathematical expressions suggests to me that nature has mathematics at its core.
Clifford A. Pickover
#14. In drying plants, botanists often dry themselves. Dry words and dry facts will not fire hearts.
John Muir
#15. A man is born gentle and weak. At death, he is hard and stiff. Green plants are tender and filled with sap. At death, they are withered and dry. Therefore, the stiff and unbending is the disciple of death, and the gentle and yielding is the disciple of life.
Laozi
#16. There is no greater success as when you turn your enemy into your ally.
Jeffrey Fry
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