Not Knowing When To Let Go Quotes
Collection of top 20 famous quotes about Not Knowing When To Let Go
Not Knowing When To Let Go Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Not Knowing When To Let Go quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Real strength isn't control. It's knowing when to let go.
— Christopher Barzak
Sometimes, knowing when to let go is just as important as knowing when to hold tight.
— Shelly Crane
Love is knowing when to let go
— M.K. Wilke
Love means knowing when to let go.
— Tony Parsons
Socialism is the religion people get when they lose their religion.
— Richard John Neuhaus
Every dancer lives on the threshold of chucking it.
— Judith Jamison
The King of Abyssinia always dines alone.
— Ernest Crawley
The ability to compromise and having the ability to laugh at ourselves is huge and works well for me.
— Steve Carell
A good man never fights with a woman.
— Gao Xingjian
Spiritual pain is when you can't stand another moment not knowing the real truth, and when you finally do know you can't let go.
— Shannon L. Alder
It was only then that I realized the distance between uncle and nephew wasn't nearly as great as I'd assumed.
— Geraldine Brooks
Good evening, children,' Said Nurse Matilda, and she gave a loud thump on the floor with her big black stick. 'I am Nurse Matilda.
— Christianna Brand
It is only when we let go of knowing what we think we know that new knowing can enter our lives.
— Maria Parkinson
You can't manage time. You can only manage your life. You can't strategically plan time, you can only plan your life.
— Farshad Asl
Life is about knowing when to let go and when to hold on.
— Bijou Hunter
I am not about to deny your salaciousness, my dear Aggs.
— K.J. Jackson
From our birth we are all dying, but some of us finish sooner than others.
— Raymond E. Feist
Too many people live too much in the past. The past must be a springboard, not a sofa.
— Harold Macmillan
Now go. An actor should know when to leave the stage, a poet when the lay is finished, and a bard when it is time to put aside the lute.
— Raymond E. Feist