
Top 17 Flame Thrower Quotes
#1. He threw his back out, which-- fair enough, I'd imagine my back would be a bit sore if I'd spent the last twenty years of my life with my head up my own ass.
Jack Whitehall
#3. You can't use stress, anxiety, frustration, and worry to deal with your stress, anxiety, frustration, and worry. It's like pulling up to a burning building with a flame thrower. The energy of the problem can't be the energy behind a successful solution.
Bill Crawford
#4. I worry that if whatever pops into your head at any instant immediately goes online, you lose the crucial time for your thoughts to simmer and evolve and build up nuance, depth and empathy.
Paul Harding
#5. There was a monster in me that had to be fed by success. There is a monster in us all that has to be fed by something.
Chloe Thurlow
#6. How could I share the
way my heart was breaking
when my confessor
didn't believe
Ellen Hopkins
#7. In every guilty man, there is an element of innocence. This is what makes any absolute condemnation revolting. We do not think enough about pain Albert Camus
Robert Zaretsky
#8. I hate pretty. It's a very empty word. It gives a bad name to beauty.
Oscar De La Renta
#9. When you haven't been in the world long, it's hard to comprehend what disasters are at the origin of a sense of disaster: maybe you don't even feel the need to. Adults,
Elena Ferrante
#10. What moves the planets and stars is the distortion of space and time. Of
Bill Bryson
#11. And I, unfortunately, have been to too many disasters as president.
George W. Bush
#12. Goddamn it, do it yourself. You're five hundred years old and you can't use a telephone? Read the directions. What are you, an immortal idiot?
Anne Rice
#14. Hey Dad, will you buy me a flame thrower?
Of course not. Don't be silly.
Even if I didn't use it in the house?
Bill Watterson
#15. I understand a hen, perfectly. I mean, the intimate life of a hen, I know how it is.
Clarice Lispector
#17. Short of taking monastic vows or trekking into the Kalahari, a freighter passage might just offer what our relentlessly connected age has made difficult, if not impossible: splendid isolation.
Christopher Buckley
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