T Quotes
Browse famous quotes beginning with T. This page is a child index of the full Popular Quotes A-Z directory.
“The Antichrist is probably a Jew alive in Israel today”
“The Antichrist, Section 7”
Source: On the Genealogy of Morals and Ecce Homo
“The anticipation and dread he felt at seeing her was also a kind of sensual pleasure, and surrounding it, like an embrace, was a general elation--it might hurt, it was horribly inconvenient, no good might come of it, but he had found out for himself what it was to be in love, and it thrilled him.”
Source: Atonement
“The anticipation of an authoritative disclosure of meaning is the means by which that authority is attributed and installed: the anticipation conjures its object.”
Source: Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity
“The anticipation of anything, act or experience, be what it may, is always better than the accomplishment of it.”
“The anticipation of discovering new possibilities becomes my greatest joy.”
“The anticipation of loss is much more frightening than the actual loss as anticipation leaves room for the imagination to create that which, in all likelihood, will never transpire.”
“The antidote for emotional and psychological scarring is not in the performance of more religious acts, more volunteering, or doing more church, as much as it is not in having the right spouse, more success, more money, or material gain. The formula is just too simple: I must come clean in order to get clean—no matter what side of the issue or hurt that I’m on.”
Source: Unstoppable Grace: A Memoir
“The antidote for fear of failure is not success but small doses of failure.”
“The antidote for fifty enemies is one friend.”
“The antidote to climate change is community.”
“The antidote to envy is one's own work. Always one's own work. Not the thinking about it. Not the assessing of it. But the doing of it. The answers you want can come only from the work itself.”
Source: Writing Past Dark: Envy, Fear, Distraction and Other Dilemmas in the Writer's Life
“The antidote to exhaustion isn't rest.
It's wholeheartedness.”
“The antidote to exhaustion may not be rest but wholeheartedness... we are typically exhausted because we are not doing our TRUE work.”
Source: Courage and Calling: Embracing Your God-Given Potential
“The antidote to exhaustion may not be rest. It may be wholeheartedness. You are so exhausted because all of the things you are doing are just busyness. There's a central core of wholeheartedness totally missing from what you're doing.”
“The antidote to fear is faith.”
“The antidote to feel-good history is not feel-bad history but honest and inclusive history. If textbook authors feel compelled to give good moral instruction, the way origin myths have always done, they could accomplish this aim by allowing students to learn both the "good" and the "bad" sides of the Pilgrim tale. Conflict would then become part of the story, and students might discover that the knowledge they gain has implication for their lives today. Correctly taught, the issues of the era of the first Thanksgiving could help Americans grow more thoughtful and more tolerant, rather than more ethnocentric.”
Source: Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong
“The antidote to feel-good history is not feel-bad history but honest and inclusive history.”
Source: Lies My Teacher Told Me: Everything Your American History Textbook Got Wrong
“The antidote to frustration is a calm faith, not in your own cleverness, or in hard toil, but in God's guidance.”
“The antidote to hatred in the heart, the source of violence, is tolerance.”
“The antidote to hatred in the heart, the source of violence, is tolerance. Tolerance is an important virtue of bodhisattvas [enlightened heroes and heroines] - it enables you to refrain from reacting angrily to the harm inflicted on you by others. You could call this practice "inner disarmament," in that a well-developed tolerance makes you free from the compulsion to counterattack. For the same reason, we also call tolerance the "best armor," since it protects you from being conquered by hatred itself.”
“The antidote to hubris, to overweening pride, is irony, that capacity to discover and systematize ideas.”
“The antidote to irrational exuberance is not regulation by itself, not skepticism, but humility – the humility to know that no system is foolproof, no market fully rational, and no generation exempt.”
“The antidote to joy is dread.”
Source: Batman: Blind Justice
“The antidote to perfectionism is acceptance - acceptance of our earthly imperfections because we are focused on the day when imperfection will be no more.”
Source: Choose Joy: Because Happiness Isn't Enough
“The antidote to stagnation is innovation.”
“The antidote to suffering is life and the seed of life is service.”
Source: When Veins Ignite: Either Integration or Degradation
“The antidote to thanatophobia is not avoidance but engagement.”
Source: Subversive Acts of Humanity : A Survival Guide for Choosing Evolution over Self-Destruction
“The antidote to the lust of the flesh is integrity.”
“The antidote to this abuse of formal Government, is, the influence of private character, the growth of the Individual.”
Source: Delphi Complete Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson (Illustrated)
“The antidote to this trap isn’t becoming selfish. It’s becoming whole. It’s allowing yourself to exist without justification. To rest without guilt. To take up space without proving your worth.”
Source: The Therapist's Handbook for Healing Your Simpsons Syndrome: Unhook from Your Inner Chaos Characters with CBT, ACT, and a Little Humor
“The antifragile loves randomness and uncertainty, which also means—crucially—a love of errors, a certain class of errors. Antifragility has a singular property of allowing us to deal with the unknown, to do things without understanding them—and do them well.”
“The antifragile perfects being imperfect.”
Source: The Definitive Guide to Thriving on Disruption: Volume II - Essential Frameworks for Disruption and Uncertainty
“The antinomian principle, that it is needless for a man perfectly justified by faith to endeavor to keep the law and do good works, is a glaring evidence that legality is so ingrained in man's corrupt nature that until a man truly come to Christ by faith, the legal disposition will still be reigning in him. Let him turn himself into what shape or be of what principles he will in religion though he run into antinomianism; he will carry along with him his legal spirit which will always be a slavish and unholy spirit.”
Source: The Marrow of Modern Divinity
“The antinuclear sentiments of both leaders were soon strengthened by a man-made nuclear catastrophe that seemed to fit right in with the biblical prophecy of Armageddon that had impressed Reagan so much: 'A great star fell from the sky, flaming like a torch; and it fell on a third of the rivers and springs. The name of the star was Wormwood; and a third of the water turned to wormwood, and men in great numbers died of the water because it was poisoned' [Revelation 8:10]. The Ukrainian word for 'wormwood' is Chernobyl.”
Source: Down with Big Brother: The Fall of the Soviet Empire
“The antique shop in the Brompton Road proved, as fore-shadowed, to be an antique shop in the Brompton Road and, like all antique shops except the swanky ones in the Bond Street neigbourhood, dingy outside and dark and smelly within. I don't know why it is, but the proprietors of these establishments always seem to be cooking some sort of stew in the back room.”
“The antique, almost primitive band he held between his fingers caught the sunlight, glinting silver. “I found this ring shortly after I was banished from heaven. I kept it to remind myself of how endless my sentence was, how eternal one small choice can be. I’ve kept it a long time. I want you to have it. You broke my suffering. You’ve given me a new eternity. Be my girl, Nora. Be my everything."”
“The antiquity and general acceptance of an opinion is not assurance of its truth.”
“The antitheist is quick to excoriate all religious belief by generically laying the blame at the door of all who claim to be religious, without distinction. By the same measure, why is there not an equal enthusiasm to distribute blame for violence engendered by some of the irreligious?”
Source: Can Man Live Without God
“The antithesis between a technical and a liberal education is fallacious. There can be no adequate technical education which is not liberal, and no liberal education which is not technical.”
Source: Aims of Education
“The antithesis of a wealth mindset is a poor mindset. Most who have this "poor mindset" or “poverty mentality” don’t even realize they have it. A poor mindset generates the thinking that attaining wealth is impossible, that it can be done without effort, or that one just does not have the special sauce it takes to become wealthy. This mindset undermines our goals and will actively drive wealth away from us unless we work to counteract it.”
Source: Average to Abundant: How Ordinary People Build Sustainable Wealth and Enjoy the Process
“The antitrust litigation currently in the federal courts in the U.S. against Monsanto will be the test case in the life sciences, just as the Microsoft case was the test case in the information sciences.”
“The ants are bad" The Bear
"the ants?"Tahir
"Do not be fooled. They look very small, so harm you don't think of then at all. Then years. Then one day you wake up, and your home has fallen down." Osman.”
Source: In Arabian Nights: A Caravan of Moroccan Dreams
“The anvil is not afraid of the hammer.”
Source: John Ploughman's Talks
“The anvil of justice is planted firm, and fate who makes the sword does the forging in advance.”
“The anxiety about human nature can be boiled down to four fears:
• If people are innately different, oppression and discrimination would be justified.
• If people are innately immoral, hopes to improve the human condition would be futile.
• If people are products of biology, free will would be a myth and we could no longer hold people responsible for their actions.
• If people are products of biology, life would have no higher meaning and purpose.”
Source: The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature
“the anxiety arising from the perpetual activity of the death instinct, though never eliminated, is counteracted and kept at bay by the power of the life instinct.”
Source: Envy and Gratitude
“The anxiety around such work [vulnerably written ethnographies] is that it will prove to be beyond criticism, that it will be undiscussable.”
“The anxiety does crawl up. The other night I was having panic attacks: 'Oh, my God, what's going to happen to me? Am I ever going to have another job?”
“The anxiety I feel when I'm late is nothing like the anxiety I feel when I'm on time.”