Oldster Quotes
Collection of top 100 famous quotes about Oldster
Oldster Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Oldster quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
We must treasure our memories just as we cherish our dreams because without dreams and memory human life would be sad, brutal, and meaningless.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Transitional periods in life are unsettling because a person's latent fears constantly whisper warnings.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Every person lives bounded by the structural formation of human anatomy and the provincial demands of the human condition.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person without a philosophy for living is at the tender mercy of other people.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
An authentic life facing reality without mental equivocation is the simplest type of life.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The most regretful behavior always leaches from a wound to our sanctimonious pride.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
An act of redemption, the ultimate act of personal grace, is an undervalued form of courage.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Reading literature and engaging in writing breaks through the mental rigidity that experience and repetition breeds.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Self-realization, which leads to purity of the soul, requires forgiving our enemies and working on the most horrendous modules of oneself.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person must move beyond guilt and unexamined thoughts and motives in order to discover a purpose for living vibrantly.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Death does not mark the end of a chapter in a man's life, but the end of a book of man, the beautiful conclusion to his yearnings.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
We hold within ourselves the medicinal materials to mend self-inflicted injuries sustained while traversing the thorny obstacle course of life.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A life of leisure never satisfies anyone who possesses a lively mind.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
We discover part of our true self only by conspicuous inspection of the depths of our conscience.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A common human error is a tendency to recognize personal truths as universal truths.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Growing old is humbling and it takes effort to accomplish this stage of life with dignity.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
No beautiful aspect of humankind is foreign to person with a lucid soul.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The tragedy of life is not death, but fearing to live, allowing parts of us to wilt and die instead of flower and rejoice.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Mindfulness can serve as an antidote to living a fragmental life riven with deleterious delusions and illusions.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The foremost calling of the human brain is to script a safe, secure, and joyous future for a person.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Unresolved issues from childhood revisit us in adulthood.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person must be in tune with the light and dark forces of their nature and remain in harmony with the bands of their own multivariate being.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The ego with its protective defense mechanisms is the biggest impediment to attaining spiritual growth.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Human life is an incongruous combination of tragedy and comedy.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Dreams fuel human beings imaginative response to existence.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Writers cheat death by constructing an immortality vessel.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The human mind is the principal agent of creation. How we think is the prism for how we perceive reality.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
We derive courage from love. Bravery borne from love trumps the ingrained desire for self-preservation.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Human inertia induces us to believe that our lives will never change unless we relocate.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Love is the ultimate salvation of the soul.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Accepting that a person will die and shucking off any aversion to this blunt thought awakens the mind to realize what is possible in a human life.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The highest degree of human attainment comes when a person is blissfully at peace with his or her own nature and the natural world.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The closet bond that we share with our brethren is that of grief. Every community knows sorrow.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Each of us encounters many diverse experiences that make us grow and transform, but we seek to return to our roots, which is quietude.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person who holds strong convictions might appear inflexible, impolite, or exceptionally obtuse, when they are merely direct.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Because survival and love are the immortal truths of humankind, no generation is a total stranger to the forerunner generations of humankind.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Without parlaying with the renunciation of the world, a person must establish a means to live in harmony with the uncertainties of a chaotic world.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person's greatest limitations are not genetic, but imposed by self-doubt, insecurities, indecision, and timidity.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Embracing human frailty, fallibility, and heartbreaking aloneness is crucial for any person seeking to attain self-actualization and self-realization.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person begins to live a moral life when they cease asking what life will provide them and begins to determine what he or she expects from oneself.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The soul is a cloister, its parameters frame both realized and failed dreams.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Our compassion, spirituality, and appreciation of beauty provide us with the capacity to love.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Life can make a person weary and wary, and the body and soul become fatigued. Unalleviated tedium extinguishes the light in the soul.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Large families are communities unto their own.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Parents' transmit their attitude towards education to children via soundless, aphonic messages.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A pensive personality and ambivalent attitude towards power and money can cause other people to take a high production or creative person for granted.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
We create a meaningful life by what we accept as true and by what we create in the pursuit of truth, love, beauty, and adoration of nature.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
We can only hope to live a meaningful life by serving as earnest witnesses to life's tragic beauty.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Summertime is a period for youthful explorations, a joyful time when we learn lessons without grand expectations or harsh consequences.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A restless human heart always seeks to increase personal understanding and works to attain excellence.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
We fear change because it insists we discard long held structures that no longer function suitably.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Paroxysms of pain and twinges of desire leach from universal sources. All human suffering buttons itself to the pang of wanting.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The simple life is an authentic life.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Examination of our past is never time-wasting. Reverberations from the past provide learning rubrics for living today.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A life of conflict and greediness causes a person to suffer from the rheumatism of sadness.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
We might respect a serious person with an austere and rigid personality, but we adore merry, kindhearted, and artistic people.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person must cultivate their personal tutelary spirit in order to achieve their ultimate visage.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Meditative thoughts assist people escape a vapid fantasy life and reconnect with ultimate reality.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
We can imprison ourselves with our wants, wishes, and false dreams.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Behind every creative act is a statement of love. Every artistic creation is a statement of gratitude.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Indecision and fear can cripple any chances of succeeding and lead to maelstroms of regret that fuel our most fantastic nightmares.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
An intrepid person does not fear failure; they boldly flirt with disaster.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person tied to the world of sorrows can return to nature for inspiration. Nature provides solace to troubled hearts.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Summers end to soon just as childhood ends before we apprehend the effervescent of our youth.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Literature is map of humanity, the documenter of civilization. Books introduce us to the landscape of the greatest minds of every century.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Suffering becomes beautiful whenever a person bears great calamities with cheerfulness.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Pent-up anger is oftentimes more destructive than a good quarrel.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Courage is an act of grace when it is not required; it originates from an inner necessity to honor, love, and cherish people, and respect oneself.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Our sacrosanct obligation is to tend to our own personal wounds and furiously love the entire world irrespective if the world loves us back.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A bird with a broken wing cannot survive nor will a man with a broken spirit endure.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
We develop our whole character from our thoughts, actions, attentive observations, and from the resolute pursuit of our inspirational dreams.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
It is important to measure ourselves at least once in life, undertake a personal odyssey that constructs a clarifying prism of our being.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person whom lacks self-discipline leaks energy chasing naked ambitions.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person whom lives by faith is not bound to feel hopelessness or the agony of infinite despair.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The phrase 'Boys will be boys,' reflects that a male child is expected to be unpredictable and occasionally troublesome.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Childhood introduces children to the wounds of the world.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Philosophic concepts are a form of sentiment. Conflicts between lofty ideas and vouchsafed values are endemic for any thinking person.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A narrow hallway is all that separates rational from irrational, creativity from insanity, and intelligence from stupidity.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Nature blessed every person with the innate capacity to express wonder and awe for the eternal world and act with a kind and unstinting soul.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Memory is a time capsule; it records the wounds inflicted upon human consciousness.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The best way to determine a person's character is to judge them when their world is falling apart.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Unerring solitude forces a person to confront their morality and aloneness. Solitude makes personal confession possible.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A person's irregular surfaces are what make us interesting.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Hate springs from fear. Violence is released hatred. Behind every hateful crime and act of human brutality is an admission of fearfulness.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Telling our personal story reveals the shape shifting landscape of our mind.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Storytelling is the distinctly human implement designed to synthesize our purposeful interaction with reality.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Life and death issues are a universal concern. A person can learn about life by investigating the psychological and social aspects related to dying.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Attempting to succeed in a competitive external environment, we can lose track of how to live without anxiety.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
We nurture our own being by respecting all people and consciously working to mitigate the pain of the world.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
An emotionally locked person refuses to let go of their sad memories and live in the now.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Rudeness is a means to attract attention, assert power, cover-up ineptitude, deflect personal insecurities, and intimidate meeker people.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Hope is a form of conscious dream making
— Kilroy J. Oldster
A willingness to let go of an old self and allow creative thoughts to remake a person into a better version of oneself requires an act of courage.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Everything that occurs to us in life is a resource, an experience that we can learn from and grow from.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Character is fate. Every day is training day.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Spiritual grace adds to a life and it is crucial ingredient in any person's quest to attain self-realization.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Our most potent memories include the taste and smells of foods we enjoyed as a child in part because it reminds us of who fed us a meal.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
Intelligence in a spouse is a timeless quality.
— Kilroy J. Oldster