Top 16 Friendless Loser Quotes
#1. I'd rather be a friendless loser than have a bunch of friends who secretly hated me. (spoken by Massie Block)
Lisi Harrison
#2. Did she look different? She felt different, as if she had traveled a thousand miles and a hundred lifetimes in a few short minutes.
Jennifer Beckstrand
#3. No one indeed believes anything unless he has first thought that it it to be believed.
Saint Augustine
#4. Dying will happen sometime. As you know, I plan for the ages, not just for this life.
Gough Whitlam
#5. Well, you already knew that life isn't fair, right?" he said. "I guess death isn't either.
Suzanne Harper
#6. She is, Althea thought uneasily, what I pretend to be: a woman who does not let her sex deter her from living as she pleases.
Robin Hobb
#7. I've always enjoyed a woman's company more than men's. They're usually better looking.
Hugh Leonard
#8. we can learn a lot from a tree; she
gives so much without expecting
anything in return. oxygen, shade,
fruit, resources. she is proud of her
roots and tough to tear down.
try to be more like a tree.
give without expectations, be
proud, be strong.
JaTawny Muckelvene Chatmon
#9. That state of simplest form of awareness alone, is worthy of seeing, hearing, contemplating and realizing.
David Lynch
#11. When you are independent you learn strategies of self empowerment
Marcelle Hinkson
#12. I am the nice adversary, the guy that's going to ask the tough questions and is not going to be happy with the quick answer.
Guillermo Del Toro
#13. Bright and wild like fire. Ha. Friendless and alone like a pathetic loser was more like it.
Mark Peter Hughes
#14. Adolescents are attracted to tragic heroes. That's why rock stars dress like homeless people. Adolescence is a fall. It's when every child becomes an orphan.
Heather O'Neill
#15. School choice is one of the strongest ways we have to educate our children, .. believes in school choice and he is going to work hard to enact school choice.
Ari Fleischer
#16. A fellow by the hand of nature mark'd, Quoted, and sign'd, to do a deed of shame.
William Shakespeare