A Quote by Chris Murray

Success would be a fairly boring and uninspiring dish if anybody could create it with a single ingredient, however difficult that ingredient was to find. No, success has several layers to its pallet. This is just the beginning
There is no single recipe for success. But there is one essential ingredient: Passion
The long run is the single most important ingredient to marathon success.
The most important single ingredient in the formula of success is knowing how to get along with people.
The single most important ingredient in the recipe for success is transparency because transparency builds trust.
What strikes me is that there's a very fine line between success and failure. Just one ingredient can make the difference.
What strikes me is that theres a very fine line between success and failure. Just one ingredient can make the difference.
Failure is a necessary ingredient for success.
If you have to choose one critical ingredient of success, it's passion.
Helping others, that must be one ingredient to success.
Don't use a different dish for every single ingredient. If you've got three ingredients that go in at the same time, put them all in the same plate. That way you have just one plate to dump in.
I'm often asked the same question: What in your work comes from your own culture? As if I have a recipe and I can actually isolate the Arab ingredient, the woman ingredient, the Palestinian ingredient. People often expect tidy definitions of otherness, as if identity is something fixed and easily definable.
Personal satisfaction is the most important ingredient of success.
The crucial ingredient in the success of any brand is its claim to authenticity.
Awareness is a key ingredient in success. If you have it, teach it, if you lack it, seek it.
Confidence is a life ingredient that is essential to success and wholeness. It is perhaps the single most important trait that enables seemingly average people to do and become all that they can. And the good news is - it can be learned. No one has to suffer a lifetime of low confidence.
I smiled at him as best I could and pushed the paper across the table before he could change his mind. Because Henry DeVille was correct - there was an ingredient in my baking more concenctrated than any extract, more pungent than any spice; an ingredient that everyone would recognize and no one was able to name: it was regret, and it rose when one least expected.
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