A Quote by Gautama Buddha

There is nothing more dreadful than the habit of doubt. — © Gautama Buddha
There is nothing more dreadful than the habit of doubt.

Quote Author

Gautama Buddha
567 BC - 484 BC
There is nothing more dreadful than the habit of doubt. Doubt separates people. It is a poison that disintegrates friendships and breaks up pleasant.
Nothing is more dangerous than discontinued labor; it is habit lost. A habit easy to abandon, difficult to resume.
Living with doubt ... is almost always more profitable than living with certainty. People don't like doubt, so they pay money and give up opportunities to avoid it. Entrepreneurshi p is largely about living with doubt. If you need reassurance, you're giving up quite a bit to get it. On the other hand, if you can get in the habit of seeking out uncertainty, you'll have developed a great instinct.
Nothing is more dreadful than a husband who keeps telling you everything he thinks, and always wants to know what you think.
Nothing is more dreadful in life than the profound thought that death may only greet you with eternal nothingness.
Nothing is more powerful than custom or habit.
nothing in life is more corroding than habit.
Courage, like fear, is a habit. The more you do it, the more you do it, and this habit-of stepping up, of taking action-more than anything else, will move you in a different direction.
A reasonable doubt is nothing more than a doubt for which reasons can be given. The fact that 1 or 2 men out of 12 differ from the others does not establish that their doubts are reasonable.
It's so dreadful to have nothing to love - life is so empty - and there's nothing worse than emptiness.
When hard times come, the greatest danger does not necessarily lie in the circumstances we face, but rather in the way we treat ourselves at the time. Nothing is more dangerous than self-hate. Nothing makes it more difficult to heal or to find the grace of peace than self-attack and the agony of self-doubt.
Laziness is nothing more than the habit of resting before you get tired.
There is nothing in the education of the average non-scientific human being to discourage him from the habit of generalizing from little or no evidence, and worse still and far more important, nothing to discourage him from the habit of starting with a generalization and ending up with the individual, instead of the other way round.
There is nothing more dreadful to an author than neglect; compared with which reproach, hatred, and opposition are names of happiness; yet this worst, this meanest fate, every one who dares to write has reason to fear.
The usual bad poem in somebody's Collected Works is a learned, mannered, valued habit, a habit a little more careful than, and little emptier than, brushing one's teeth.
If there be any one habit which more than another is the dry rot of all that is high and generous in youth, it is the habit of ridicule.
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