Top 15 Stotsky Common Quotes
#1. I walk the beach to smile at other people
and their busy children, trying to find
another way to save the world.
Thomas Dukes
#2. Work honestly and build, build, build. That's all I can tell you,
J. R. Simplot
#3. We completely need him. Who else comes up with the plans?"
"Demos?"
"Yes, but he isn't hot, Nate. We talked about is.
Sarah Alderson
#4. I may be paralyzed from the waist down, but unlike Gray Davis, I'm not paralyzed from the neck up.
Larry Flynt
#5. You become so overwhelmed by your life situation that you lose your sense of life, of Being. Or you are carrying in your mind the insane burden of a hundred things that you will or may have to do in the future instead of focusing your attention on the one thing that you can do now.
Eckhart Tolle
#6. Hearing myself so much all the time, I don't think I sound that special all the time because it's me.
Stan Getz
#7. But once we got them on its feet then they run themselves, unless there's corrections you have to make.
Jerry Bruckheimer
#9. And perhaps it is the greater grief, after all, to be left on earth when another is gone.
Madeline Miller
#10. Men are appalling.. We never really grow up, well not on the inside. It's all just an act. Don't ever trust men, we're dreadful. Enjoy us, use us, abuse us, but never trust us." - HAM
Maggie Alderson
#11. Tomorrow we will only give them a leaf of the tree of our love, a leaf which will fall on the earth like if it had been made by our lips like a kiss which falls from our invincible heights to show the fire and the tenderness of a true love.
Pablo Neruda
#12. He fucks with the single-minded devotion of a dying man hunting God.
Karen Marie Moning
#13. I find myself coming out of the library with all women writers. I keep hoping the library attendant won't notice, but when 8 out of 8 of the books you take out are by women, you try not to look too dykey.
Eve Babitz
#14. My father used to say there are two kinds of people: the noticers and the noticed
Lori Lansens
#15. Since childhood, since her early school days, New Year's Eve had possessed for her a mournful terror: she had elected it to represent the Nothingness which was her own life, the solid, cheerful festival which had seemed to be the lives of others.
Margaret Drabble
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