Top 18 Quotes About Feeling Unwanted
#1. O fortunate bride, who never again will become elated after
childbirth!
O lucky older wife, who has been cured of feeling unwanted!
Louise Bogan
#2. I get up around 6:30. I work from about 8:00 to 1:00, take a break for lunch, work again until about 5:00, and then go for a long walk and have dinner. Then, if my wife and I have no previous plans, we decide what to do for the evening.
Chaim Potok
#3. It is seeing ourselves in others that often prompts the remark, 'There's something about that person I don't trust.
Robert Breault
#4. It's very hard, feeling that you're no more than a piece of unwanted furniture in this world.
Anton Chekhov
#5. She was lucky to be wanted not desired though, worse pain is the feeling of being unwanted in love.
Pushpa Rana
#6. Home is the one place in the world where you are safe from feeling put down or out, unentitled, or unwanted.
Cheryl Mendelson
#7. I'm just an individual who doesn't feel that I need to have somebody qualify my work in any particular way. I'm working for me.
David Bowie
#8. The biggest diease today is not leprosy or tuberculosis, but rather the feeling of being unwanted, uncared for, and deserted by everybody.
Mother Teresa
#9. A nation or civilization that continues to produce soft-minded men purchases its own spiritual death on the installment plan.
Martin Luther King Jr.
#11. In the kingdom, the greater our responsibilities, the greater is our need to see ourselves as servants.
Spencer W. Kimball
#12. It was quite normal in that day for a man to use up three or four wives in a normal lifetime.
John Steinbeck
#13. Life is short. Ricky and I realize how lucky we were. We want to be together all the time.
Christie Brinkley
#14. Too many constants were changing, belying the illusion of permanence.
Raymond L. Atkins
#15. When things don't go the way you want them to, sometimes instead of feeling disappointment or heartache, you just become numb.
April Mae Monterrosa
#16. The biggest disease today is not leprosy or tuberculosis, but rather the feeling of being unwanted.
Mother Teresa
#17. Loneliness and the feeling of being unwanted is the most terrible poverty.
Mother Teresa
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