A Quote by Jim Jarmusch

The beauty of life is in small details, not in big events. — © Jim Jarmusch
The beauty of life is in small details, not in big events.
People are interested in relevant stories. In big events. But I'm not interested in big things; I'm interested in the smaller details of life.
I guess I have an aversion to writing about big events and heroic actions. The everyday has always seemed most important to me in writing, probably because I believe people reveal themselves in how they deal with small details.
During a big tournament, it is the small details that make big differences.
When playing against big teams, it's the small details that count.
There's a tendency at the senior and middle-manager level to be too big-picturish and too superficial. There is a phrase, "The devil is in the details." One can formulate brilliant global strategies whose executability is zero. It's only through familiarity with details - the capability of the individuals who have to execute, the marketplace, the timing - that a good strategy emerges. I like to work from details to big pictures.
Whatever I do, whether it's cooking shows, books or events, the details count and that's what sets me apart from other food TV personalities. If you take out the details what's left?
It takes the same effort to think small than to think big. But to think big frees you from the insignificant details.
I think, as a writer, you see the big picture, and as an actor, you're thinking of all the minutiae, all the very small details.
Sweating the small stuff is important in boxing and life. On a movie, we have production assistants who're 18 and 19 years old. If someone asks you for a cup of coffee, and you bring them a cup of coffee that's cold, I make a big deal of that. I make a really, really big deal of that. You have to pay attention to details.
I see in [George H. W.] Bush a striving to be Reagan-like in the sense of having a big vision, and eschewing small details.
[E]very job is composed of many small details, any one of which, if overlooked, can create big problems later.
We still carry this old caveman-imprint idea that we're small, nature's big, and it's everything we can manage to hang on and survive. When big geophysical events happen - a huge earthquake, tsunami, or volcanic eruption - we're reminded of that.
The majors and big events eventually bring the best players to the top so if I play well or not I always find playing the big events very motivating because it shows you where the game is at.
Whenever I'm writing a book, small details from my life always creep in.
Happiness hides in life’s small details. If you’re not looking, it becomes invisible.
There's a different beauty to big and small audiences, and I don't think one is better.
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