“Eating and food are a wonderful part of our life's experience, and half of us are walking around dreading having to figure out what to put in our mouths.” HalfOur LivesWonderfulFiguresWalkingEatingMouths Author:Gabrielle Reece
“Death is the continuing of life ... the next part of our life. It's like walking through a door, you know? Walking through the door marked "Death": It's the beginning of a new part of our journey.” KnowsDeathNextOur LivesDoorsJourneyWalkingContinuing Author:Rosemary Altea
“Our society is filled with runaways, dropouts, and quitters. The epidemic of walking away has hit our land with effects as devastating as the bubonic plague, and it has destroyed millions of effective lives and relationships. We are so self-centered that we have ceased to lay down our lives for others. We have seen others faint or walk away and we have followed in their weakness. We have fainted when we could have persevered by exchanging our strength for His! With His strength, not only could we have kept on walking, we could have run!” SelfRunningWalksMillionsOur LivesLandEffectsWalkingWeaknessFilledLaysDestroyedOur SocietyPlagueSelf CenteredEpidemicsWalking AwayRunawayExchangingQuitterLive For OthersDropoutsBubonic Plague Book:God, How Can I Live? Source: God, How Can I Live?
“The car has made our lives more difficult. If not for it, we would have everything we needed within walking distance.” IfsMadeDifficultOur LivesCarNeededWalkingDistance Author:Siddharth Katragadda
“Happiness is not like we were walking around fingering razor blades or anything like that. But it just sort of seems as if - we sort of knew how happy our parents were, and we would compare our lives with our parents and see that, at least on the surface or according to the criteria that the culture lays down for a successful, happy life, we were actually doing better than a lot of them were.” IfsSeemsCultureParentSuccessfulOur LivesWalkingLaysSurfaceCompareHappy LifeBladesCriteriaRazors Author:David Foster Wallace
“In real life, we're not walking around waiting for something to happen. We live our lives, and then suddenly we fall in love with somebody, and it's a big mess because you have a wife already, and it's going to destroy your life. And, at the same time, it's beautiful. Often, in films, it's not like that.” RealBigsHappensBeautifulFilmFallWaitingOur LivesWifeWalkingFalling In LoveReal LifeMessWaiting For Something Author:Tobias Lindholm
“I always think about Katharine Graham - she was the publisher of The Washington Post. In her autobiography she talks about the way her parents met. Her father was, I think, in New York just walking by on his way home and looked into a store and saw the lady that became his wife. It was just pure luck. And she said that it once again reminds her of the role that luck and chance play in our life. I really believe that, too.” ThinkingWayBelieveSaidPlayHomeFatherParentChanceRolesSawsOur LivesWifeNew YorkWalkingMetsPureLuckStoresPostsAutobiographyPublishersWay Home Author:Owen Wilson
“There is a sequence of events in our lives and so there's a temporal aspect to our experience that brings by itself, sense into the story. In other words, you were not walking before you were born and you were not doing X and Y before you did something else first. So there's a sequencing of events that imposes a certain structure to the story.” FirstsStoriesCertainBornOur LivesEventsWalkingAspectStructureSequenceSequencingSequence Of Events Author:Antonio Damasio