
Top 14 Minos Greek Quotes
#1. As long as thanks is possible, then joy is always possible.
Ann Voskamp
#2. I don't really have any secret shames. If I like an artist, I like them. Nothing to feel embarrassed about.
Mark Hoppus
#3. Dave thought he was bigger than Van Halen the band. So there was this catfight going on for 10 years.
Gary Cherone
#4. May we, as image makers, shapers of the culture, set our sights on things we value, rituals we engage in that heal and serve. May our images honor the ordinary endeavors of common people, and may they make their way to the eyes of the weary - light to the dark, fire to the chill.
Jan Phillips
#5. I think people would be surprised to discover that their challenges and struggles are not too dissimilar to us, average ordinary people, we're all looking for essentially the same thing and I think that's faith and hope and love and meaning and of course satisfaction, peace, joy.
Judah Smith
#6. Inspiration could be called inhaling the memory of an act never experienced.
Ned Rorem
#7. In a world where change is inevitable and continuous, the need to achieve that change without violence is essential for survival.
Andrew Young
#8. It helps, I think, to consider ourselves on a very long journey: the main thing is to keep to the faith, to endure, to help each other when we stumble or tire, to weep and press on.
Mary Caroline Richards
#9. Maybe there are only three kinds of stories: those we live, those we tell, and those that help our souls fly upwards to a greater life.
Ben Okri
#10. What you've got to do is be honest. Say what you believe. Give it to them straight. Just don't wuss out.
Michael Bloomberg
#11. My thoughts, my beliefs, my feelings are all in my brain. My brain is going to rot.
Richard Dawkins
#12. Twentieth century women's fashions (with their cult of thinness) are the last stronghold of the metaphors associated with the romanticizing of TB in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
Susan Sontag
#13. We shall never find happiness by looking at our prayers, our doings, or our feelings; it is what Jesus is, not what we are, that gives rest to the soul.
Charles Spurgeon
#14. It's a fruitless task, explaining yourself," he said. He was enjoying confessing the truth for once. "Either people get you, or they don't. In fact, even when they get you, it's always ... a disappointment.
Alethea Black
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