Freedom opens a few doors and closes many
more.
My mind is a sea I cannot see into; I merely skim along
its surface.
I think, therefore I am a living person; dead bodies
don't display thinking, just stinking.
Sometimes the present alters our interpretation of the
past; most often the past surrounds and infects the present.
Wherever I go, something new becomes me.
Be careful not to stand up for that which will cause
your downfall.
God may be very smart, but he is a poor communicator.
What ought to be cannot be derived from what is the
case, but a reasonable person ought not to ignore what is the case.
I can admire a few great persons or heroes, but seldom
have much desire to try and imitate them.
Disrespect and contempt for the body is a common trump
card for spiritualists; but, our game of life does not use trump cards.
Nonsense can sometimes improve our sense and senses.
Prohibitions focus our aim on better choices and
actions.
Don't sell the present short on the promises of "when."
Most tire from hatefulness; cheerfulness is abiding.
Stubborn facts are loosened up with novelty.
A sure path to the perversion of truth is to make it a
belief.
The act, the deed, the doing are the primary
considerations.
My body gave birth to my mind, is in my mind, and my
body-mind thrives in our world of lived experiences.
Objectivity is a product of our agreements, and an
important feature of my imagination.
R. Buckminster-Fuller once suggested that "God is a
verb, not a noun." Which verb? Pretending? Storytelling? Fantasizing?
Believing?
My consciousness is a vegetable soup, and the water in
the soup is what I do.
Yes, I am just this and that; but, I am also not just
that and this.
Hearing the cat purr when we pet them gently matters far
more to us than whether the cat's fur is black, white, or orange.
If you think you are damned if you do or damned if you
don't, your not thinking creatively enough.
The ten thousand things are more enchanting than the
Silent One.
To lift the mind, move the body.
Pulling Onions: The Quips and Sayings of an Old Gardener. Over 840 quotes. By Mike
Garofalo
No comments:
Post a Comment