A Quote by Elizabeth Gilbert

Tis' better to live your own life imperfectly than to imitate someone else's perfectly. — © Elizabeth Gilbert
Tis' better to live your own life imperfectly than to imitate someone else's perfectly.
It's better to do your purpose imperfectly than to do someone else's purpose perfectly.
The Bhagavad Gita—that ancient Indian Yogic text—says that it is better to live your own destiny imperfectly than to live an imitation of somebody else’s life with perfection. So now I have started living my own life. Imperfect and clumsy as it may look, it is resembling me now, thoroughly.
It's better to live as your own man, than as a fool in someone else's dream.
Sometimes, if you're lucky, someone comes into your life who'll take up a place in your heart that no one else can fill, someone who's tighter than a twin, more with you than your own shadow, who gets deeper under your skin than your own blood and bones.
Better to do something imperfectly than to do nothing perfectly.
Acting is kind of an escape. You get to live life as someone else, and when you're living this life as someone else, you don't really have time to think about your own life.
It is better to fail at your own life than to succeed at someone else's.
It is better to travel than to arrive. Better, by far, to find your own way than to have someone else choose it for you -- don't you think?
The energy you'll expend focusing on someone else's life is better spent working on your own. Just be your own idol.
When you are secure in who you are, you set the trend for your own life, and do not look to others to tell you how to live. When you know that every truth you seek is available within you, you will not place someone else's idea of how you should live, above your own.
I like ambiguity because you may be the villain in someone else's story and the hero in your own, and I think very often, African-American characters are either one thing or the other. You shouldn't have to be perfectly good or perfectly bad. You don't even have to be magical.
It's your life - but only if you make it so. The standards by which you live must be your own standards, your own values, your own convictions in regard to what is right and wrong, what is true and false, what is important and what is trivial. When you adopt the standards and the values of someone else . . . you surrender your own integrity. You become, to the extent of your surrender, less of a human being.
Being a failure at living your own life as best as you can is better than being a success living the life somebody else says you should live.
Well, you might as well imitate your own program because if you don't, someone else will.
The greatest tragedy is to live out someone else's life thinking it was your own.
It is not humility to insist on being someone that you are not. It is as much as saying that you know better than God who you are and who you ought to be. How do you expect to arrive at the end of your own journey if you take the road to another man's city? How do you expect to reach your own perfection by leading somebody else's life? His sanctity will never be yours; you must have the humility to work out your own salvation in a darkness where you are absolutely alone.
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