Top 33 Quotes About Water Lao Tzu
#2. Do you have the patience to wait until your mud settles and the water is clear?
Lao-Tzu
#3. One can not reflect in streaming water. Only those who know internal peace can give it to others.
Lao-Tzu
#4. My fans have grown up with me and seen my life change over the years, from a young girl with 'Goodies' to a full-grown woman and now mom.
Ciara
#5. I said it is a new day, let us greet it together." Half
S.K. Epperson
#6. To die for the sake of dying - I prefer to die of passion than to die of boredom!
Vincent Van Gogh
#7. You have to believe. You have to stick to your guns.
Arthur Cohn
#8. Muddy water, let stand, becomes clear.
Lao-Tzu
#9. Trying to understand is like straining through muddy water. Have the patience to wait! Be still and allow the mud to settle.
Lao-Tzu
#10. The gentle outlast the strong The obscure outlast the obvious Hence, a fish that ventures from deep water is soon snagged by a net A country that reveals its strength is soon conquered by an enemy
Lao-Tzu
#11. The excellence of water appears in its benefiting all things, and in its occupying, without striving (to the contrary), the low place which all men dislike.
Lao-Tzu
#12. The highest excellence is like (that of) water.
Lao-Tzu
#13. There is nothing in the world more soft and weak than water, and yet for attacking things that are firm and strong there is nothing that can take precedence of it; - for there is nothing (so effectual) for which it can be changed.
Lao-Tzu
#14. We could end up in prison married to the guy with the most cigarettes.
Neal Stephenson
#15. If it's me and yer granny on bongos, it's the Fall.
Mark E. Smith
#16. Obscure as muddied water. But, with stillness, muddy waters clear. Can you also act while remaining still?
Lao-Tzu
#17. Sen. Rand Paul is a Different Kind of Republican. He will drag the party, kicking and screaming, toward a new kind of conservatism that appeals more to today's youth, who embrace liberty and are skeptical of foreign intervention.
Alex Pareene
#18. Nothing is softer or more flexible than water, yet nothing can resist it.
Lao-Tzu
#20. Water is fluid, soft & yielding but water will wear away rock, which is rigid and cannot yield ... what is soft is strong.
Lao-Tzu
#21. The major difference between rats and people is that rats learn from experience.
B.F. Skinner
#22. Higher good is like water:
the good in water benefits all,
and does so without contention.
It rests where people dislike to be,
so it is close to the Way.
Good ground;
profound is the good in its heart,
Benevolent the good it bestows.
Lao-Tzu
#23. In the world there is nothing more submissive and weak than water. Yet for attacking that which is hard and strong nothing can surpass it.
Lao-Tzu
#25. The primary quality that Lao Tzu seems to emobdy is humility, which is the image of water - seeking the common level of existence.
Frederick Lenz
#26. Do you have the patience to wait till your mud settles and the water is clear? Can you remain unmoving till the right action arises by itself? LAO-TZU, Tao-te-Ching
Jon Kabat-Zinn
#27. The aim of the gospel is the creation of people who are passionate for doing good rather than settling for the passionless avoidance of evil.
John Piper
#28. While he sweated out a story she bled put a poem. (Dark City Lights)
S.J. Rozan
#29. Who can (make) the muddy water (clear)?
Lao-Tzu
#30. There's power in believing there's a God in each of us because if we are made in His/Her/Their image, aren't we all like good horcruxes for God? Because a piece of them is in us?
Luvvie Ajayi
#31. Water is fluid, soft, and yielding. But water will wear away rock, which is rigid and cannot yield. As a rule, whatever is fluid, soft, and yielding will overcome whatever is rigid and hard. This is another paradox: what is soft is strong.
Lao-Tzu
#32. Taoism is the way of water. The most frequent element or symbol refered to in Lao Tzu's wrtings is the symbol of water.
Frederick Lenz
#33. Water is the softest thing, yet it can penetrate mountains and earth. This shows clearly the principle of
softness overcoming hardness.
Lao-Tzu