All Quotes By Tag: Happiness
“Sunshine will guide your heart even on the most darkest of days.”
“happiness is a choice and is entirely down to us”
“Life is a beach. Don’t make spelling errors.”
“2/3rds of unexpected deaths are wiping out a family’s assets due to a lack of insurance cover. Protect your assets, Protect your family.”
“Home is where the Heart is. Don’t let damage to your home wipe out your hard earned savings. Protect your home, secure your assets”
“Happiness was not a destinationIt was harmony with their thoughtsIt was absorbing the radiance of starsIt was merging into the dark cloudsIt was reveling in the glory of the rainbow.”
“Laime ir saistīta ar loģisko prātu, un tikai prāts spēj to novērtēt. Man tika tas, ko cilvēks nevar ne nopelnīt, ne paturēt, un bieži vien pat nepazinās saņemšanas brīdī, – sirds prieks.”
“It’s when we float on air that we bathe in love.”
“People may spend their whole lives climbing the ladder of success only to find, once they reach the top, that the ladder is leaning against the wrong wall.” – Thomas Merton. What do you want to see when you reach the top of the ladder?”
“Do you remember the story I told you about the paper of happiness? And the secret, which was one word written over and over again? … I have thought a long time about what that word could have been,” Ba said. “Was it wisdom or honor? Love or truth? For a long time I liked to think that the word was kindness.”Ma’s face remained hidden in Minli’s bed, but her sobs had stopped and Ba knew she was listening.“But now,” Ba said, “I think, perhaps, the word was faith.”
“It’s what’s in my heart that shows my love for you.”
“Happiness in your heart is directly proportional to the quality of thoughts in your mind.”
“So they tell you to buy stuff. More and more and more stuff. Even if you don’t need any more stuff, buy more stuff! Because capitalism is like a pyramid scheme. It must constantly grow, constantly shovel more money to the top, like a sand monster feeding itself sand, or it dies.”
“Philosophy of mind is more important for success and happiness than ambition, education, or status.”
“How we spend our days,” author Annie Dillard writes, is “how we spend our lives.” Rather than waiting until we’re happy to enjoy the small things, we should go and do the small things that make us happy. After a depressing divorce, a friend of mine made a list of things she enjoyed–listening to musicals, seeing her nieces and nephews, looking at art books, eating flan–and made a vow to do one thing on the list after work each day. As blogger Tim Urban describes it, happiness is the joy you find on hundreds of forgettable Wednesdays.”