
Top 15 Understandability In Accounting Quotes
#1. You can see when someone's been hurt the way I was. It's obvious. Something changes in their eyes; pain becomes their center, even when they try to hide it.
Cheryl Rainfield
#2. I used to take it personally when a casting director didn't like me or I didn't get picked for something. Now I realize you can't do that. It'll mess with your self-esteem. Don't take rejection overly personally. If that doesn't work out, there's something else waiting for you.
Sierra McCormick
#3. Grief and pain are like joy and peace; they are not things we should try to snatch from each other. They're sacred.
Glennon Doyle Melton
#4. People are meant to go through life two by two. 'Tain't natural to be lonesome.
Thornton Wilder
#6. I've written this poem before but always through a window, never through an open door.
Andrea Gibson
#7. You can have all of me, I silently told him, but I'm taking all of you in return.
Jeaniene Frost
#8. I don't care about my "impact" - I only care about the theater as an art form and criticism as an act of writing.
Neil Patrick Harris
#9. I always thought they were a God-send; and they were ... But then again, so was the Great Flood.
Steve Maraboli
#10. Although I have won many times now, each time when I have a lead, I start to think about winning. It's very difficult not to think about winning. Every time, there are new challenges. Every time, there are new issues to overcome.
Yani Tseng
#11. Many of the habits of dysfunctional families use are not from the lack of love but are the result of fear. Knowing the love-limiting habits and behaviors of dysfunctional families is a wonderful beginning to lower the fear, allowing us to be real, allowing us all to learn how to love better.
David W. Earle
#13. Attention may sound dull, but it is an essential aspect of consciousness. In fact, it governs what it is that we turn out to be conscious of, and therefore plays a part in the coming into being of whatever exists for us.
Iain McGilchrist
#15. I ventured into fiction in 1988 with 'What Love Sees,' a biographical novel of a woman's unwavering determination to lead a full life despite blindness.
Susan Vreeland
Famous Authors
Popular Topics
Scroll to Top