Top 14 Quotes About Water In The Awakening
#1. We get such a kick out of looking forward to pleasures and rushing ahead to meet them that we can't slow down enough to enjoy them when they come.
Alan Watts
#2. Soccer forces life to move on. There's always a new match. A new season. There's always a dream that everything can get better. It's a game of wonders.
Fredrik Backman
#4. Every time we make jokes about how jologs someone's school is, we are not insulting the poor student's intellectual abilities but their parents' financial capacity.
Lourd Ernest H. De Veyra
#5. I entered the water as naked as when my mother bore me. When I first touched the cold water I felt a shudder go through me, then the shudder was transformed into a sensation of wakefulness.
Tayeb Salih
#6. Men who turn their faith into a business owe all of us a steak dinner now and then.
Walter Kirn
#7. In our culture I think most people think of grief as sadness, and that's certainly part of it, a large part of it, but there's also this thorniness, these edges that come out.
Anthony Rapp
#8. I think of the feel of water. The way it is when you wade into the ocean and a small wave cascades against you, swirling sand over you and awakening every pore.
Jessica Park
#9. We may neglect the wrongs which we receive, but be careful to rectify those which we are the cause of to others.
Orville Dewey
#10. John Coltrane was an addict; Billie Holiday was an addict; Eugene O'Neill was an addict. What would America be without addicts and post-addicts who make such grand contributions to our society?
Cornel West
#11. Why are all you hets all so intercourse-centric? There's a lot more to sex than sticking it in and wiggling it around.
Anne Tenino
#12. Awakening into the God state makes all the perceptual limitations of the mind disappear, just like a bucket of muddy water turns crystal-clear once poured into the ocean.
Abhijit Naskar
#13. I can sympathize with people's pains, but not with their pleasure. There is something curiously boring about somebody else's happiness.
Aldous Huxley
#14. Most scientific problems are far better understood by studying their history than their logic.
Ernst Mayr
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