Losing Yourself In Someone Else Quotes
Collection of top 19 famous quotes about Losing Yourself In Someone Else
Losing Yourself In Someone Else Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Losing Yourself In Someone Else quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Any excuse for non-performance, no matter how valid, weakens character.
— Spencer W. Kimball
I was somewhat out of place among my classmates; I could not be as bohemian as they were.
— Erno Rubik
Of the things which nourish the imagination, humour is one of the most needful, and it is dangerous to limit or destroy it.
— John Millington Synge
You can only really judge yourself in comparison to other people. How bad you are, but you're not as bad as someone else. So it's degrees of losing.
— John Cusack
I look out over my life and see a million question marks with only a few definitive exclamation points. I'm living for the next exclamation.
— Christy Hall
There's nothing like losing yourself in someone else's troubles to make you forget your own.
— Therese Anne Fowler
I know that love is giving yourself to someone else. Giving yourself to someone without losing yourself
— Tiffany Reisz
Intelligent life on a planet comes of age when it first works out the reason for its own existence.
— Richard Dawkins
If I've reached the place where I'm a good influence on anybody, it's time I cultivated some new vices.
— Robert A. Heinlein
Don't let something like the simple word "No" stop you from doing anything!
— Wendy Noriega-Quintana
There's a dream world that we visit sometimes and that's how we found out who we are.
— Anthony Horowitz
You can bomb the world to pieces, but you can't bomb it into peace. Power to the peaceful.
— Michael Franti
Goodrich was the biggest acquisition in the history of aerospace.
— Louis R. Chenevert
Performing for the Dalai Lama - those are words I never imagined coming out of my mouth.
— Joe Nichols
The thing I like about acting is being able to lose yourself completely in someone else.
— Ellen Page
Being able to lean on someone else . . . maybe that was brave. I mean, if you leaned on someone, you had to trust that they wouldn't let you fall.
— Holly Jacobs
Decency, not to dare to do that in public which it is decent enough to do in private.
— Michel De Montaigne