A Quote by Earl Nightingale

You can measure opportunity with the same yardstick that measures the risk involved. They go together. — © Earl Nightingale
You can measure opportunity with the same yardstick that measures the risk involved. They go together.
Security isn't what the wise person looks for; it's opportunity. And once we begin looking for that, we find it on every side. You can measure opportunity with the same yardstick that measures the risk involved. They go together.
the giver measures his gift with one yardstick, and the receiver measures it with another.
But our minds are bound to the yardstick of yesterday, today and tomorrow, and with that yardstick we try to inquire into the unknown, to measure that which is not measurable.
You can measure the warming oceans with a thermometer. You measure sea level rise with a yardstick. You can measure the dramatic increase in acidification with a simple pH test, and you can replicate what excess CO2 does to seawater in a basic high school science lab.
There's always a risk that something goes wrong, like a structural failure. But you have confidence in the whole system and the measures that have gone into place to minimize the risk. Sometimes you land when your knees are clanking together and you say you're lucky to be alive. But you are - and you move on.
A bank needs models to measure risk. The problem, however, is that any one bank can measure its risk, but it also has to know what the risk taken by other banks in the system happens to be at any particular moment.
I believe Ofsted measures poverty. It measures deprivation. It doesn't measure excellence.
The minister of the Gospel is really the yardstick by which the nation measures its morals.
If you are poor, shun association with him who measures men with the yardstick of riches.
The minister of the Gospel is really the yardstick by which the nation measures it’s morals
Using volatility as a measure of risk is nuts. Risk to us is 1) the risk of permanent loss of capital, or 2) the risk of inadequate return.
History uses a unit of measure for time that is different from that of the lifespan of the individual, whereas man is only too ready to measure the evolution of history by his own yardstick.
When health workers are infected at work, this puts other healthcare workers at risk, but also can be a risk to all other patients, understanding where the breach in these measures is occurring and taking the steps needed to fully implement infection prevention and control measures can put an end to these ... infections.
To complain that man measures God by his own experience is a waste of time; man measures everything by his own experience; he has no other yardstick.
We cannot measure Divine Providence by the yardstick of human mentality.
As a physician, I recognize that we all have an opportunity to enhance our health, and reduce our cancer risk. That is why I became involved with Less Cancer, a not-for-profit organization founded by Bill Couzens that is dedicated to the reduction of cancer risk.
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