Eleanor Roosevelt Quote – You Begin To Die
“When you cease to make a contribution, you begin to die.” – Eleanor Roosevelt
Read more“When you cease to make a contribution, you begin to die.” – Eleanor Roosevelt
Read more“Champions aren’t made in the gyms. Champions are made from something they have deep inside them — a desire, a dream, a vision.” – Muhammad Ali
Read more“Happiness often sneaks in through a door you didn’t know you left open.” ― John Barrymore
Read more“Forgiveness and reconciliation are not just ethereal, spiritual, otherworldly activities…. They are realpolitik, because in a very real sense, without forgiveness, there is no future.” – Desmond Tutu
Read more“Middle age is when your age starts to show around your middle.” – Bob Hope
Read more“That some good can be derived from every event is a better proposition than that everything happens for the best, which it assuredly does not.” – James K. Feibleman
Read more“All life demands struggle. Those who have everything given to them become lazy, selfish, and insensitive to the real values of life. The very striving and hard work that we so constantly try to avoid is the major building block in the person we are today.” – Pope Paul VI
Read more“Tomorrow is another day.”
Read more“Only one letter divides the comic from the cosmic.” – Vladimir Nabokov
Read more“Ancient peoples invented rites of passage in part to break the spell of childhood and move the initiate from the mother’s lap to the lap of the world. To this day, a person must dismantle the spell of childhood or fail to find their place in life.” – Michael Meade
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