Top 15 Oblongata Function Quotes
#1. Love without choice isn't love at all.
Beth Revis
#2. I think, in all honesty, the first place that someone in emotional distress should turn is their loved ones, and then to use professionals ...
Peter Kinderman
#3. You can get there from here, though there's no going home.
Everywhere you go will be somewhere you've never been.
Theories of Time and Space
Natasha Trethewey
#4. Nothing amuses me more than the easy manner with which everybody settles the abundance of those who have a great deal less than themselves.
Jane Austen
#5. Theory includes a transcendent idea, as do all great world narratives.
Neil Postman
#6. The fate of war is to be exalted in the morning, and low enough at night! There is but one step from triumph to ruin.
Napoleon Bonaparte
#7. Anyone that has come to America past the age of eighteen will be able to understand when I say that you can never shake your accent.
Martin Yan
#8. Remember that quitting is always an option, and it's the only one that guarantees a predictable result. Stay in the fight and everything is at risk. Quit and you know what will happen NOTHING!
Jim Bouchard
#9. But here's a critical point - more open decision making processes also typically require open information sharing. If you are going to involve more people in the process, they have to have the right information on which to base their decisions.
Charlene Li
#10. In the past, the West had tried to export one formula of democracy which should fit to the rest of the world, and they discovered that this doesn't work.
Abdul Aziz Al Ghurair
#11. It's scary putting so much faith in one organ. You can live without your brain functioning, but it is impossible to live without all the pieces of your heart
Savannah Randolph
#12. I missed the basic curiosity of being in the lab.
Eric Betzig
#13. It is the parent's job to see how their child learns and to make sure that the children's self confidence is buoyed at all times, or they will plummet like a stone.
Henry Winkler
#15. All for each, and each for all, is a good motto; but only on condition that each works with might and main to so maintain himself as not to be a burden to others.
Theodore Roosevelt
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