My Feelings Don't Matter Quotes
Collection of top 17 famous quotes about My Feelings Don't Matter
My Feelings Don't Matter Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational My Feelings Don't Matter quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
[On Las Vegas:] I love that town. No clocks. No locks. No restrictions.
— Marlene Dietrich
Feelings are feelings, no matter when they happen. Our bodies don't stop being ours just because worse things happen to other people.
— Foz Meadows
I'm the kind of parent who asks my kids questions like, 'What would be your ideal thing to do in the summer?'
— Dwyane Wade
You know, I like playing around with my voice and trying all different types of kooky voices.
— Moira Kelly
The instinct of a man is to pursue everything that flies from him, and to fly from all that pursue him.
— Voltaire
Write with honesty and don't worry about the feelings of others, because no matter what you say, they'll hate you anyway.
— Isabel Allende
I don't like to hurt people's feelings, and I don't like to knock other writers as a matter of principle.
— Lydia Davis
Griffin: "Did you just fuck him into submission?" He held his knuckles up to me. "Nice.
— S.C. Stephens
When everything is said and done, the only thing that really matters is the quality of the soul you build during the life you're given.
— Kayt C. Peck
In reality it is far less prejudicial to witness the immorality of the great than to witness that immorality which leads to greatness.
— Alexis De Tocqueville
I feel I'm often misunderstood by critics. People project a lot or exaggerate the subjective fragility simply because it's frightening to them.
— Mary Gaitskill
The illusion is that most of my work is simply about past events: a point in history and nothing else.
— Kara Walker
Chastity is oftener owing to diffidence and shame, than to fortitude of reason or virtue.
— Norm MacDonald
No matter how beautiful the outside may be, the inside still has feelings and needs that just words don't fulfill.
— Hubert Selby Jr.
Tornadoes were, in out part of Central Illinois, the dimensionless point at which parallel lines met and whirled and blew up. They made no sense.
— David Foster Wallace