P Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with P. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“Practice what you know, and it will help to make clear what now you do not know.”
“Practice what you preach and let people learn from you”
“Practice what you preach and watch how life starts to work in your favor”
“Practice what you preach. Don't be a staggering image of the same shame you place upon others. Live, love, be free. Most of all be real.”
“Practice with the obstacle, always with the obstacle, and seek combinations.”
“Practice with your fingers and you need all day. Practice with your mind and you will do as much in 1 1/2 hours.”
“Practice without improvement is meaningless.”
“Practice without thought is blind. Thought without practice is empty.
(note: Two versions of this do not cite the book and are not exact. Action is not part of the equation.)”
Source: Consciencism: Philosophy and Ideology for De-Colonization and Development with Particular Reference to the African Development
“Practice works because practice gives us a chance to relax enough to make smart choices.”
“Practice writing and speaking about what you do.”
“Practice your improv more than learn your lines. 'Cause there's no way you'll be able to learn all those lines in a short time. You have to realize what you know and what you don't know - and what you don't know, just come up with three alternate lines or improv that you can put in that spot.”
“Practice your swing until it becomes a habit of mind and muscle.”
“Practice yourself what you preach.”
Source: Delphi Complete Works of Plautus (Illustrated)
“Practice yourself, for heaven's sake, in little things, and thence proceed to greater.”
“Practice, practice, practice in speaking before an audience will tend to remove all fear of audiences, just as practice in swimming will lead to confidence and facility in the water. You must learn to speak by speaking.”
Source: The Art of Public Speaking
“Practice, practice, practice. Practice until you get a guitar welt on your chest...if it makes you feel good, don't stop until you see the blood from your fingers. Then you'll know you're on to something!”
“Practice, the master of all things.”
“Practice, which some regard as a chore, should be approached as just about the most pleasant recreation ever devised.”
Source: Championship golf
“Practice, work hard and give it everything you've got.”
“Practice, work out, proper nutrition, lots of work on my short game. In golf, that's really where the strokes come off the scorecard.”
“Practice. I used to sit on the edge of my bed with a six-pack of Tuborg. My brother would go out to party and get laid, come home at 3am., and I would still be playing with myself.”
“Practice. Learn and then unlearn - that's the trick in finding your own style of playing. You can't merely emulate, you have to innovate, or at the very least create your own path into the process.”
“Practice. Listen. Use you ears. And as Rob [Halford] said, that team effort. You can learn your instrument in your room, but being in a band is more than playing your instrument.”
“Practice? I never practice. I just write songs and take solos.”
“Practiced poorly, tourism can be extremely negative.”
“Practices should be for the players and not the coach. Practices should be fun for the players, positive in nature, and last no more than two hours.”
“Practices were tough.”
“Practicing a thousand yoga postures, doesn't make a person spiritual, nor does uttering "aum" or "hallelujah" a thousand times - what makes a person spiritual, is plain ordinary everyday act of kindness.”
Source: Lives to Serve Before I Sleep
“Practicing an art, no matter how well or badly, is a way to make your soul grow, for heaven's sake. Sing in the shower. Dance to the radio. Tell stories. Write a poem to a friend, even a lousy poem. Do it as well as you possibly can. You will get an enormous reward. You will have created something.”
Source: A Man Without a Country
“Practicing an attitude of gratitude spills over to acts of generosity.”
Source: One Simple Act: Discovering the Power of Generosity
“Practicing charity is the best way to evangelize.”
“Practicing daily mindset journaling brings progression, and progression brings the manifestation!”
“Practicing Dharma is the supreme method for improving the quality of our human life.”
“Practicing discipline involves continually working to find space in our patterns, to find the gaps in the images we hold about ourselves. It also means finding the gaps in our ideas about others, releasing images that we hold about a manager, a coworker, a friend, or a partner.”
“Practicing going over scenes and in front of the camera just to see how that feels, and then ultimately just finding a way to expose yourself to people. That’s what I did.”
“Practicing gratitude is like turning the dimmer switch up. Things you never noticed before keep lighting up your heart.
(They always were there, just unlit.)”
“Practicing is not only playing your instrument, either by yourself or rehearsing with others - it also includes imagining yourself practicing. Your brain forms the same neural connections and muscle memory whether you are imagining the task or actually doing it.”
“Practicing kindness increases our ability to be empathetic. It helps keep our hearts open. And that, truly, is the best way to live.”
Source: A Butterfly Life: 4 Keys to More Happiness, Better Health & Letting Your True Self Shine
“Practicing law in a general practice litigation firm can quickly sap an attorney’s enthusiasm for life as well as their inner will to pursue their line of trade that they invested years of schooling qualifying to perform. In phone calls, an attorney listens to clients scream, cry, and curse, make wild accusations, and threatening to harm other people. Because the client is paying the firm, they feel entitled to act obscenely.”
Source: Dead Toad Scrolls
“Practicing love often means feeling through fear: intentionally opening yourself when you would rather close down, giving yourself when you would rather hide. Love means recognizing yourself as the open fullness of this moment regardless of its contents -- trenchant thoughts, enchanting pleasures, heavy emotions, or gnawing pains -- and surrendering all hold on the familiar act you call 'me'.”
“Practicing medicine is not only my vocation, it gives me an opportunity to continue to be in direct contact with people, to see them and hear their needs.”
“Practicing meditation is just like breathing. While working we breathe, while sleeping we breathe, while sitting down we breathe... Why do we have time to breathe? Because we see the importance of the breath, we can always find time to breathe. In the same way, if we see the importance of meditation practice we will find the time to practice.”
“Practicing mindfulness can seem abstract at first. It certainly was to me. But what I’ve learned is that when we use the senses we have available, we create a shortcut to present-centered living. Because the body naturally rests in the here-and-now, it proves itself a useful tool in mindfulness.”
Source: Meditations for Black Men: Ten Guided Meditations for the Body, Mind, and Spirit
“Practicing Mindfulness not only keeps us awake but also keeps us aware of the impermanence of life; therefore, we have a greater appreciation of it. We care. Life matters. The moments of our lives matter. We don’t want to waste them. Not a single one.”
Source: Mindfulness and Mysticism: Connecting Present Moment Awareness with Higher States of Consciousness
“Practicing mutual aid is the surest means for giving each other and to all the greatest safety, the best guarantee of existence and progress, bodily, intellectual and moral.”
Source: Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution
“Practicing positivity is like brushing our teeth—it doesn’t last, so we have to repeat often. That’s where the effort and practice come in.”
Source: Sharpen Your Positive Edge: Shifting Your Thoughts for More Positivity and Success
“Practicing presence is remembering how to live.”
Source: 12 Tiny Things: Simple Ways to Live a More Intentional Life
“Practicing reflection daily ensures a healthy and invigorating lifestyle for both your mind and body. Your thoughts will be the key to your success.”
Source: The "No Excuses" Mindset: A Life of Purpose, Passion, and Clarity
“Practicing regular, mindful breathing can be calming and energizing and can even help with stress-related health problems ranging from panic attacks to digestive disorders.”
“Practicing self-love means learning how to trust ourselves, to treat ourselves with respect, and to be kind and affectionate toward ourselves. This is a tall order give how hard most of us are on ourselves. I know I can talk to myself in ways that I would never consider talking to another person. How many of us are quick to think, "God, I am so stupid" and "Man, I'm such an Idiot."? Just like calling someone we love stupid or an idiot would be incongruent with practicing love, talking like that to ourselves takes a serious toll on our self-love”
Source: The Gifts of Imperfection