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Time and tide wait for no man; Time flies; Time goes by slowly when your are living intensely; Time is a great healer; Time is money (Only) time will tell 'Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all; To be worn out is to be renewed – Laozi, Chinese philosopher (604 BC – c. 531 BC) [11] To each his own
100. “Find purpose. The means will follow.” 101. “Self-respect knows no considerations.” 102. “Compassion is a muscle that gets stronger with use.”
The second theme common to karma theories is ethicization. This begins with the premise that every action has a consequence, [8] which will come to fruition in either this life or a future life; thus, morally good acts will have positive consequences, whereas bad acts will produce negative results. An individual's present situation is thereby ...
The Fated ones are an accumulation of all our past lives actions, for which one would experience his or her consequences in the current life and future lives. Consequences can be perceived as positive, negative and/or neutral. In simple essence, they will be experiences one has to undertake.
"This too shall pass" (Persian: این نیز بگذرد, romanized: īn nīz bogzarad) is an adage of Persian origin about impermanence.It reflects the temporary nature, or ephemerality, of the human condition — that neither the negative nor the positive moments in life ever indefinitely last.
Following the death of compiler John Cook in 2001, Steve Deger and Leslie Ann Gibson took over as series editors, creating The Women's Book of Positive Quotations (2002, now out-of-print), The Little Book of Positive Quotations (2006) and a revised and expanded The Book of Positive Quotations, 2nd Edition (2007), which included 3,000 new ...
[142] Earlier than O'Brian's Aubrey, Beatrice Grimshaw also used repeated splicings of proverbs in the mouth of an eccentric marquis to create a memorable character in The Sorcerer's Stone, [143] such as "The proof of the pudding sweeps clean" (p. 109) and "A stitch in time is as good as a mile" (p. 97). [144] Proverb from Spiderman now in ...
Good moral actions lead to wholesome rebirths, and bad moral actions lead to unwholesome rebirths. [14] [quote 3] [quote 4] The main factor is how they contribute to the well-being of others in a positive or negative sense. [38] Especially dāna, giving to the Buddhist order, became an increasingly important source of positive karma. [39]