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                #1. The state of your life is nothing more than a reflection of the state of your mind.
                Wayne W. Dyer
							 
            
                    
		    
                #2. You desire the end but close your eyes to the means. You want the garden to be beautiful, provided that the smell of manure is kept well away from your fastidious nose.
                P.D. James
							 
            
            
		    
                #3. Men would like monogamy better if it sounded less like monotony.
                Rita Rudner
							 
            
            
		    
                #4. Men are most powerfully affected by those evils which themselves feel, or which appear before their own eyes.
                Samuel Johnson
							 
            
                    
		    
                #5. She breathed heavily, like a figure skater just off the ice.
                Boris Fishman
							 
            
            
		    
                #6. There are often references to childhood, but they're rarely the focus of the [my] novels.
                Paul Auster
							 
            
            
		    
                #7. Where did you come from, baby dear? Out of the everywhere and into here.
                George MacDonald
							 
            
            
		    
                #8. Sensitive love letters are my specialty. 'Dear Baby, Welcome to Dumpsville. Population: you.'
                Homer
							 
            
                    
		    
                #9. A similar criticism arose in the guise of "reflexivity," the idea that the very act of observing another person's actions changes those actions, making observational methods intrinsically flawed.
                Anonymous
							 
            
            
		    
                #10. The Word of God we read is written not so much with ink as with the blood of the Son of God; or
                John Calvin
							 
            
            
		    
            
            
		    
            
            
		    
                #13. From the time we began to build houses and cities, since we invented the wheel, we have not advanced one step toward happiness. We have always been in halves. As long as we invent and progress in mechanical things and not in love, we shall not achieve happiness.
                Jean Giono
							 
            
            
		 
		
			        
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