T Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with T. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“the way we
live forever young,
and the way we love…
how it feels like a forever love
we feel infinite”
“The way we live in the West we live like kings. People moan about this and that in Britain but we have running water, electricity, security and a rule of law and so many people in the world don't have these.”
“The way we live is a direct reflection of the choices we made in the past. No body's perfect, we don't always make the right choices. The wrong choices seem to come with what we're willing to accept in our everyday lives. Accepting Jesus Christ in our lives goes a long way, and opens our heart, and mind to a new beginning. Amen.”
“The way we live often speaks far louder than our words.”
Source: Hope for Each Day: Morning & Evening Devotions
“The way we live ought to manifest the truth of what we believe. A messy life speaks of a messy and incoherent faith.”
Source: Let Me Be a Woman
“The way we live our daily lives is what most effects the situation of the world. If we can change our daily lives, then we can change our governments and can change the world. Our president and governments are us. They reflect our lifestyle and our way of thinking. The way we hold a cup of tea, pick up the newspaper or even use toilet paper are directly related to peace.”
“The way we live our days, is the way we live our lives.”
“The way we live out our days is the way we will live our lives.”
Source: The Francis Chan Collection: Crazy Love, Forgotten God, Erasing Hell, and Multiply
“The way we look at a problem can help us solve half of the problem itself!”
“The way we look at it, everything is a sound.”
“The way we look at nineteenth-century English social realism and appreciate the working classes of the emerging industrial revolution.”
“The way we look is our second tongue!”
“The way we love people we disagree with is the best evidence of what we really believe.”
“The way we make money as a group is that we don't pay a lot for anything, and most of the stocks we buy have low expectations.”
“The way we manage our classrooms sends a powerful message to our students about our values and priorities. Let's choose techniques that uplift and empower, rather than diminish and harm.”
“The way we measure awareness is by how long you can stop thought. If you can't stop thought at all, then you are not powerful. You might be quite evolved, but you have no access to that evolution.”
“The way we measure productivity is flawed. People checking their BlackBerry over dinner is not the measure of productivity.”
“The way we metabolize our experience of time influences our biological clock.”
“The way we move direct influences how our bodies are shaped.”
Source: Move Your DNA: Restore Your Health Through Natural Movement
“The way we move within time is a kind of dance. We are always keeping time within one rhythm or another. Music, of course, is exemplary. One reason we love music so much is that it's so complete and the notes harmonize with one another in time to make a beautiful, ideal statement; not like our daily life where the rhythms are more subtle or hard to find or are constantly being interrupted or changed in ways that aren't so easy to handle.”
“The way we pay for the present by liquidating the future truly fits the definition of a Ponzi scheme. Any other forms of Ponzi schemes are outlawed, only the ecological one we seem to ignore or even encourage.”
Source: Ecological Footprint: Managing Our Biocapacity Budget
“The way we react to adversity can be a major factor in how happy and successful we can be in life.”
“The way we regard death is critical to the way we experience life. When your fear of death changes, the way you live your life changes.”
“The way we relate with people is the same way we relate with God”
“The way we respond to criticism pretty much depends on the way we respond to praise. If praise humbles us, then criticism will build us up. But if praise inflates us, then criticism will crush us; and both responses lead to our defeat.”
“The way we reward children with food is based on folk memories of a food supply that has not existed in the West for decades, when white sugar was so rare it seemed to sparkle like snow.”
Source: First Bite: How We Learn to Eat
“the way we rise
from every sorrow in life
is the most gorgeous thing i’ve seen”
Source: Home Body
“The way we see is critical to understanding how others will read our compositions.”
“The way we see the problem is the problem.”
Source: The Wisdom and Teachings of Stephen R. Covey
“The way we see the world determines the way we live our lives”
Source: The Four Signs of A Dynamic Catholic: How Engaging 1% of Catholics Could Change the World
“The way we see the world is not actually the world in itself. What we see is our idea of it. The truth is, we have no notion of what the world is other than through the veils of our perception.”
“The way we see the world shapes the way we treat it. If a mountain is a deity, not a pile of ore; if a river is one of the veins of the land, not potential irrigation water; if a forest is a sacred grove, not timber; if other species are biological kin, not resources; or if the planet is our mother, not an opportunity -- then we will treat each other with greater respect. Thus is the challenge, to look at the world from a different perspective.”
“The way we see things is constantly changing. At the moment the way we see things has been left a lot to the camera. That shouldn't necessarily be.”
“The way we see things is the source of the way we think or the way we act”
Source: The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People: Powerful Lessons in Personal Change Interactive Edition
“The way we spend our time defines who we are.”
“The way we started was, Alison [McGhee] said, 'Tall girl, short girl.' We had no plans beyond that.”
“The way we still essentializ, we're constantly essentializing people as merely poor, or merely other, and in the end you can't have a relationship with people. I think the biggest job of adulthood is to learn to imagine other people complexly.”
“The way we subsidize food makes it cheaper to go to McDonald's and get a hamburger than a salad, and that's insane. It's pure government policy.”
“The way we symbolize disease ends up shaping the way we experience and respond to disease.”
Source: Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection
“The way we talk about grief is dead wrong.”
Source: Move Forward Stronger: A Dynamic Framework to Process Change, Loss, and Grief
“The way we talk to our children becomes their inner voice.”
“The way we teach is a very linear kind of way.”
“The way we tell our life story is the way we begin to live our life.”
Source: Unreliable Truth: On Memoir and Memory
“The way we think about ourselves will give rise to the world we live in.”
“The way we think , define the way we act.”
“The way we think may be completely different, but you and I are an ancient, archetypal couple, the original man and woman. We are the model for Adam and Eve. For all couples in love, there comes a moment when a man gazes at a woman with the very same kind of realization. It is an infinite helix, the dance of two souls resonating, like the twist of DNA, like the vast universe.”
Source: Lizard
“The way we treat animals is the root cause of all the human suffering in the world, from poverty, starvation, disease, and war to lack of clean air and water, not to mention all the varied forms of human emotional and spiritual suffering.”
“The way we treat our children in the dawn of their lives and the way we treat our elderly in the twilight of their lives is a measure of the quality of a nation.”
“The way we treat people we disagree with most is a report card on what we've learned about love.”
“The way we treat people we think can't help or hurt us - like housekeepers, waiters, and secretaries - tells more about our character than how we treat people we think are important. How we behave when we think no one is looking or when we don't think we will get caught more accurately portrays our character than what we say or do in service of our reputations.”