
Top 14 Famous 500 Days Of Summer Quotes
#1. The deepest hunger of [a child's] human heart is to be understood, for understanding implicitly affirms, validates, recognizes and appreciates the intrinsic worth of another.
Stephen Covey
#2. I'm just gonna do a podcast because it's mine, I can control it, I have complete responsibility over it, and no one can touch it.
Chris Hardwick
#3. When our responses turn into reactions and we set out to teach people a lesson, we lose. We lose because the act of teaching someone a lesson rarely succeeds at changing them, and always fails at making our day better, or our work more useful.
Seth Godin
#4. Not many people bothered to look for beauty beyond the greenhouses. They went about life with their heads down, just praying to get through the day, to feed themselves and their family. No one ever did anything to make it better.
Erica Lindquist
#5. Books allow you to see the world through the eyes of others.
Malorie Blackman
#6. He liked the way his laughter sounded with theirs. It was a sound he had never heard before: not mingled laughter - he had heard that lots of times - but mingled laughter of which his own was a part.
Stephen King
#7. Julia stood for his youth, and the high hopes he had cherished; and although he might no longer yearn to possess her she would remain nostalgically dear to him while life endured.
Georgette Heyer
#8. What makes success is not your genius idea, but the execution and follow-through around it
Robin Sharma
#9. I am - since I was a child - curious about everything. I like to look at how things work and why people are the way they are.
Lela Loren
#10. A single seed of fact will produce in a season or two a harvest of calumnies; but sensible men will pay no attention to them.
James Anthony Froude
#11. Everything you study, everything you learn, makes you a better writer, because you have more understanding of how things work.
Marge Piercy
#12. 'What am I missing?' is a much more important question than 'How cool am I?'
Paul Singer
#13. Each opinion, each view is necessarily partial, truncated, inadequate. In philosophy and in anything, originality comes down to incomplete definitions.
Emil Cioran
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