A Quote by Carlos Castaneda

Fright never injures anyone. What injures the spirit is having someone always on your back, beating you, telling you what to do and what not to do — © Carlos Castaneda
Fright never injures anyone. What injures the spirit is having someone always on your back, beating you, telling you what to do and what not to do
The test of every religious, political, or educational system, is the man which it forms. If a system injures the intelligence it is bad. If it injures the character it is vicious. If it injures the conscience it is criminal.
Hate is too great a burden to bear. It injures the hater more than it injures the hated.
In morals, theosophy builds its teachings on the unity, seeing in each form the expression of a common life, and therefore the fact that what injures one injures all. To do evil i.e., to throw poison into the life-blood of humanity, is a crime against the unity.
Zen is the spirit of a man. Zen believes in his inner purity and goodness. Whatever is superadded or violently torn away, injures the wholesomeness of the spirit. Zen, therefore, is emphatically against all religious conventionalism.
Friendship always benefits; love sometimes injures.
Your worst and most dangerous enemy is the person that injures you under the pretensions of friendship.
The unjustifiable severity of a parent is loaded with this aggravation, that those whom he injures are always in his sight.
If the other person injures you, you may forget the injury; but if you injure him you will always remember.
Why should guns be treated different than toasters? If your defective product injures somebody, you're responsible for it.
Violence never settles anything right: apart from injuring your own soul, it injures the best cause. It lingers on long after the object of hate has disappeared from the scene to plague the lives of those who have employed it against their foes.
The act of God injures no one.
He who injures one man threatens many.
He who spares the bad injures the good.
He who quarrels with a drunken man injures one who is absent.
One ungrateful man injures all who need assistance.
There is something to that old saying that hate injures the hater, not the hated.
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