A Quote by E. L. Konigsburg

Indecisiveness wears a person out. — © E. L. Konigsburg
Indecisiveness wears a person out.
Like a robe wears out over time and turns to rags, life wears out from day to day, from second to second.
I wear Spanx to smooth things out. I read that Jessica Alba wears them and if she wears them, then so should I.
Coming out of indecisiveness and being determined is the pre condition for being called young.
I like jewellery because it's forever. Flowers die, chocolates get eaten and lingerie wears out in the wash. Plus, the girl is reminded of you every time she wears it. It's a wise move.
The optimist, as you probably know, is a person who, when he wears out his shoes, just figures he's back on his feet.
Talent wears well, genius wears itself out; talent drives a snug brougham in fact; genius, a sun-chariot in fancy.
Conversation's got to have some root in the past, or else you've got to explain every remark you make, an' it wears a person out.
You have to be decisive. Indecisiveness is a startup killer.
I, uh, well, it's the first thing that you do when you go to a job, you go out and do the footings and you see all the clothes, and for me, that really helps kind of create a sense of who that person is and what she wears and it, yeah.
Zeal is a volcano, the peak of which the grass of indecisiveness does not grow.
In the end, I think, the state's rigidity is a function of its own insecurity, its indecisiveness.
Fear is like the strong medicine used to fight serious diseases; it purges, but it also alters your temperament and wears out the body organs. A person who is driven by fear will always be the weaker for it
There's going to be government and politics that aren't representative of everyone. So, we have to really take it by a person by person basis, we can't just say, "hey, this guy looks like this," or "he's that religion" or "he wears this kind of clothes," "your skin tone is this way."
It is true that no one can harm the person who wears armor. But no one can help him either.
There's little to see, but things leave an impression. It's a matter of time and repetition. As something old wears thin or out, something new wears in. The handle on the pump, the crank on the churn, the dipper floating in the bucket, the latch on the screen, the door on the privy, the fender on the stove, the knees of the pants and the seat of the chair, the handle of the brush and the lid to the pot exist in time but outside taste; they wear in more than they wear out. It can't be helped. It's neither good nor bad. It's the nature of life.
What I like doing is imagery that can be interpreted in any particular way by the person who wears it.
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