How Hurt I Am Quotes
Collection of top 38 famous quotes about How Hurt I Am
How Hurt I Am Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational How Hurt I Am quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
But the thing is that, in the end, we each must decide how comfortable we are with how much we hurt other people
— Chris Abani
I don't know how people box for a living. I don't know how they can just hurt people for a living and be OK with it.
— Maggie Q
She's fire...but she will not burn you. She knows all too well how it feels to live with ashes.
— Alfa H
How do you tell a child that she was born to be hurt?
— Juanita Moore
It was maddening how your best friend could twist the knobs inside of you so much that it hurt.
— Melissa De La Cruz
No matter how big his smile or how loud his laugh, you could hear the hurt underneath.
— Kirby Larson
Open the hurt locker and see what there is of knives and teeth.
Open the hurt locker and learn how rough men come hunting for souls. — Brian Turner
Open the hurt locker and learn how rough men come hunting for souls. — Brian Turner
Women shouldn't be burdened by what existed in their past, we should all learn how to turn pain into strength.
— Drew Barrymore
It's funny how many ways there are to hurt people. As many ways to hurt as there are species of flower. Whole bouquets of hurt.
— Joshua Gaylord
I slowly stand, looking down at my clothes. I wish that there were bloodstains or tears, something to outwardly show how hurt I am.
— Suzanne Young
I am good at walking away. Rejection teaches you how to reject.
— Jeanette Winterson
She always forgot how pain was so upsetting. Cruel. It hurt your feelings. You just wanted it to stop, please, right now.
— Liane Moriarty
No matter how hard I try to forget you, you always come back to my thoughts
When you hear me singing I am really crying for you. — Jane Bierhorst
When you hear me singing I am really crying for you. — Jane Bierhorst
How can I fault her for trying to bury a truth that when exposed to air and sunlight could only hurt the ones she loves?
— Sarah Ockler
Prideful fool. It hurt his feelings that he couldn't make my crazy go away. You know how men are. Always trying to fix things can't be fixed.
— Ken Wheaton
People hurt each other. That's how it works. At least you were trying to do something good. Not everyone can say that much.
— Tana French
Is that love, do you think?" he asks, sounding genuinely curious. "Being crazy about someone no matter how much they hurt you?
— Stacey Jay
You never know how much you need music until you don't have it. I missed it so much my heart hurt.
— Damien Echols
But think about how it feels when your hands are so cold they go numb. How it's only when they start to thaw out that you realize how much they hurt.
— Lauren Wolk
It's never an insult to be called what somebody thinks is a bad name. It just shows you how poor that person is, it doesn't hurt you.
— Harper Lee
I forgot how it feel like to have the top of my foot hurt so bad from kicking people on the face ...
— Randy Orton
No, he wasn't a pig. He was a lonely, hurt man who didn't know how to cope in a world that had turned its back on him. [Astrid]
— Sherrilyn Kenyon
It was amazing, wasn't it, how bad you could hurt when there was nothing physically wrong.
— Stephen King
No matter what your products it doesn't hurt to know how to sell. Improving your selling skills is certainly beneficial
— Timi Nadela
The difference between friendship and love is how much you can hurt each other.
— Ashleigh Brilliant
I'm sorry, all right. I'd take it all back if I could. I don't mean to hurt you, Kitten. I fucking love you and I don't know how to handle it.
— Michelle A. Valentine
I've been an actor for 30 years, so I pretty much know how to do the basics of a fight without hurting anybody.
— Julie Benz
No one wants to get hurt but without pain how can we win?
— Debasish Mridha
Maybe that's how I learned to handle up my deep hurt ... by forgetting.
— Benjamin Carson
Being hurt personally triggered a curiosity about how such beliefs are formed.
— Philip G. Zimbardo