C Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with C. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“Caring for veterans shouldn’t be a partisan issue. It should an American one.”
“Caring for your body is not self-indulgence, it’s strategic preparation for everything life demands.”
“Caring for your heart is also how you protect your relationship with God... [The heart] is where we commune with him. It is where we hear his voice. Most of the folks I know who have never heard God speak to them are the same folks who live far from their hearts.”
Source: Eldredge 3 in 1 - Sacred Romance , Waking the Dead, Desire
“Caring for your inner child has a powerful and surprisingly quick result: Do it and the child heals.”
“Caring for yourself while caring for a loved one is to hold empathy in one hand and boundaries in the other”
Source: Always with You: Spiritual Comfort for Those Living in the World of Dementia
“Caring is a reflex. Someone slips, your arm goes out. A car is in the ditch, you join others and push... You live, you help.”
“Caring is a reflex...You live, you help.”
“Caring is a trait of the living. Not of the dead.”
Source: The Dark and Hollow Places
“Caring is irrelevant. Desire to do good is irrelevant. All that counts is knowledge and results”
“Caring is love. And love fights! Love doesn't look for the path of least resistance.”
Source: The Highlander Series 7-Book Bundle
“caring is not abstract. The circle of ecological compassion we feel is enlarged by direct experience of the living world, and shrunken by its lack.”
Source: Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants
“Caring is not bossing somebody around; it only shows you’re very insensitive to other peoples’ feelings”.”
“Caring is open-hearted, keeping us available to transmit love to a stranger through simple eye contact and without condition. This is not the opportunistic sizing-up of sexual cruising; instead, it’s the felt recognition of the divinity and humanity in another individual.”
Source: Mirror of Intimacy: Daily Reflections on Emotional and Erotic Intelligence
“Caring is our curse. If we don’t care, we can’t get hurt. But if we didn’t care, the world would be a dark place to live. We have to deal with it and realize life isn’t fair. People are taken out of our lives, and others live who don’t deserve to continue.”
Source: Essence
“Caring is such an essential part of being and becoming. It allows us to connect with ourselves and others; gives us a sense of belonging; gives us purpose; and provides us with an avenue to make a difference, add value, and be the change we want to see in the world.”
“Caring is the essence of nursing.”
Source: Nursing: Human Science and Human Care : a Theory of Nursing
“Caring is the only daring.”
Source: The Walking-away World
“Caring is weakness, and weakness is death.”
Source: Texas Outlaw
“Caring is what matters, not stuff or status, just people sharing kindness & joy in a web of the heart that spans the globe.”
“Caring less what everybody else thinks, but also caring less and less about what your own mind thinks, because what your own mind thinks, sometimes, is the thing that makes you sad.”
“Caring means cultivating the skills of an active listener. That is easier said than done, as an anecdote about the extraordinary social skills of British politicianBenjamin Disraeli and his rival William Gladstone illustrates ... The rivalry between the two statesmen piqued the curiosity of American Jennie Jerome, admired beauty and the mother of Winston Churchill. Ms. Jerome arranged to dine with Gladstone and then with Disraeli, on consecutive evenings. Afterward, she described the difference between the two men this way: "When I left the dining room after sitting next to Gladstone, I thought he was the cleverest man in England. But when I sat next to Disraeli, I left feeling that I was the cleverest woman.”
Source: Relevance: Matter More
“Caring meant being courageous enough to be fully present with one another. One did not have to be useful or whole or even remotely healed as long as they were present, willing to bear themselves - their full, vulnerable selves - to others and allow their history of hurt to be transformed into a wellspring of healing.”
Source: Sweep of Stars
“Caring nature is the best commitments you can do for your feature!!!”
“Caring passionately about something isn't against nature, and it isn't against human nature. It's what we're here to do.”
“Caring should never make you regret, but if you care for someone who doesn't appreciate it and takes it for granted, it can give you regret and make you doubt your choices.”
“Caring too much about someone can make you lose your own limits.”
“Caring too much could be dangerous; I saw that now. But the alternative was no better.”
Source: Outpost
“Caring too much for objects can destroy you. Only—if you care for a thing enough, it takes on a life of its own, doesn’t it? And isn’t the whole point of things—beautiful things—that they connect you to some larger beauty?”
“Caring too much for someone who doesn't care for you can make you emotionally drained too.”
“Caring too much is what's breaking me, but it's also what's mending me.”
Source: What's a Girl Gotta Do?
“Caring was a thing with claws. It sank them in, and didn’t let go. Caring hurt more than a knife to the leg, more than a few broken ribs, more than anything that bled or broke and healed again. Caring didn’t break you clean. It was a bone that didn’t set, a cut that wouldn’t close.”
Source: A Conjuring of Light
“Caring what others think about us is normal. The desire to belong is basic to human nature. But in order to feel like you truly belong, you must accept yourself for who you are. This is critical to Fearless Living.”
Source: Fearless Living
“Caring without caring,” is how my mother explained it. Thus a memsa can judge anyone – friend or stranger – and remain fair. They care without caring”
Source: Sheever's Journal, Diary of a Poison Master
“Caring works. Caretaking doesn't. We can learn to walk the line between the two.”
Source: The Language of Letting Go
“Caring, it turns out, is a competitive advantage, and one that takes effort, not money.”
“Caring, whether for children or the dying, shouldn't be instrumental. It should be an intrinsic, moral good.”
“Caring. And reading the Bible, learning about God, Jesus, love. He said, 'Bring on the children', 'Imitate the children', 'Be like the children' and 'Take care of others.' Take care of old people. And we were raised with those values. Those are very important values and my family and I we were raised with those values and they continue strong in us today.”
“Carl Armstrong was one of those people in the anti-war years who had been so convinced of the righteousness of their cause that he and some friends decided they would blow up a building at the University of Wisconsin, in which they said research was being done to help the war against the Vietnamese. What they blew up at three or four in the morning was a young scientist, who was married and had a couple of kids, who wasn't working on war stuff at all. And he was killed.”
“Carl Becker has defined a professor as a man who thinks otherwise; a scholar is a man who otherwise thinks.”
“Carl constantly told horror stories of cursing and beatings from his father and the twenty-four-hour blackout screaming of his alcoholic, pill-popping mother. He used his trauma like a caution sign for what he could do if I didn’t silence my backtalk.”
Source: Just Another Number
“Carl did not want to believe. He wanted to know.”
“Carl discreetly turned his head to the left and then the right to make sure Mom wasn’t within hearing range.
“I tried to stick it in er ass once and she didn’t speak to me for a week,” he nearly whispered before belting out a slur of loose chuckles. “And gettin’ ‘er to do ya on top? Forget about it!”
In ways, I morphed into Carl’s description of the ideal woman. Like Mom, physical beauty was my ultimate priority. I spent hours on end stripped naked, posing in front of my full length bedroom mirror at every angle so that each wrinkle, roll, and pinch of fat could receive sharp scrutiny before I strived for complete self annihilation. I made it a habit of studying every Teen magazine model and the skinniest cheerleaders in my middle school yearbook. I observed their arms, legs, and hips. I held their images against mine with a goal for my bones to protrude further and calves spread further apart when standing straight. However, I saw the way Carl bent his head down and lowered his voice when he spoke about Mom, as if it was our job to keep a feisty, barking puppy believing that it was our guard dog.
“Ure mom can’t help she got half ure I-Q,” Carl would chuckle.”
Source: Just Another Number
“Carl Friedrich Gauss, often rated the greatest mathematician of all time, played the market. On a salary of 1,000 thalers a year, Euler left an estate of 170,587 thalers in cash and securities. Nothing is known of Gauss's investment methods.”
Source: Fortune's Formula: The Untold Story of the Scientific Betting System That Beat the Casinos and Wall Street
“Carl Furillo was pure ballplayer. In his prime he stood six feet tall and weighed 190 pounds and there was a fluidity to his frame you seldom see, among such sinews. His black hair was thick, and tightly curled. His face was strong and smooth. He had the look of a young indomitable centurion ... I cannot imagine Carl Furillo in his prime as anything other than a ballplayer. Right field in Brooklyn was his destiny.”
“Carl Icahn told me to stay away from airlines. In good times, the unions take away the profits, and in bad times, the cost of oil kills you.”
“Carl Jung called this his shadow work. He said we never see others. Instead we see only aspects of ourselves that fall over them. Shadows. Projections. Our associations.”
Source: Diary: A Novel
“Carl Jung had come to the same conclusion fifty years before: Among my patients in the second half of life—that is to say, over thirty-five—there has not been one whose problem in the last resort was not that of finding a spiritual outlook on life.”
Source: Yoga and the Quest for the True Self
“Carl Jung never said: “There is no coming to consciousness without pain. People will do anything, no matter how absurd, in order to avoid facing their own Soul. One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious.”
What Dr. Jung said in two separate and unrelated statements was:
Seldom, or perhaps never, does a marriage develop into an individual relationship smoothly and without crises; there is no coming to consciousness without pain. ~Carl Jung, Contributions to Analytical Psychology, P. 193
People will do anything, no matter how absurd, in order to avoid facing their own souls. One does not become enlightened by imagining figures of light, but by making the darkness conscious. ~Carl Jung, Psychology and Alchemy, Page 99.”
“Carl Jung proposed that everything in the universe is connected. [...] Every part is considered not in isolation but in relation to the whole. He asserted that everything that takes place at a particular moment of time has the qualities of that moment, and that all events taking place at the same time are connected. [...]
The fall of the I Ching's coins, the Tarot card spread or the fall of the runes are 'meaningful coincidences' that reflect present and future events.”
Source: Your Psychic Powers: A Beginner's Guide
“Carl Jung put [Orfeo Angelucci] in his last book [Flying Saucers: A Modern Myth of Things Seen in the Sky, Harcourt, Brace & World, 1959]. He said Orfeo had made up a new bible.”