Only Loving One Person Quotes
Collection of top 17 famous quotes about Only Loving One Person
Only Loving One Person Quotes & Sayings
Happy to read and share the best inspirational Only Loving One Person quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes.
Better to be a loving person without knowing how you got there, than an expert no one can stand to be around.
— John Ortberg
The bat is gone, but the smile remains.
— Willie Stargell
For it is one thing to declare one's love for someone and quite another to accept that loving that person requires sacrificing one's dreams.
— Nicholas Sparks
The only person worth risking everything for is the one person that would never let you risk everything for.
— Shannon L. Alder
Pray that you are in the right place, at the right time, to meet the right person, that together you may help one another.
— Don Polson
It just takes one person, believing in you. It just takes one person, loving on you. That's all it takes to change the world
— Emily T. Wierenga
In the end it is all about loving your family. For one the family can be as small as single person or as big as whole world.
— Pratik Akkawar
Loving another person is not separate from loving God. One is a single wave, the other is the ocean.
— Deepak Chopra
The big lesson about loving someone was coming to understand that when love ended for one person, it ended for both people.
— Elizabeth George
Never test for an error condition you don't know how to handle.
— Daniel Keys Moran
So many things becomes beautiful when you really look.
— Lauren Oliver
Look at things ... as they can be.
— David Joseph Schwartz
If it feels so good loving the wrong person, imagine how wonderful it is going to be when you love the right one.
— Truth Devour
Eyes remaining solidly on her, he replied,
— Dianne Venetta
How can both Nics, the loving and considerate and generous one, and the self-obsessed and self-destructive one, be the same person?
— David Sheff
One thing I do know about death. The "better" the person, the more loving and happy and caring, the less of a gap that person's death makes.
— Lucia Berlin