A Quote by Mary E. DeMuth

As I look back over my mountains of growth and compare them to the molehills where I stagnated, community often made the difference. — © Mary E. DeMuth
As I look back over my mountains of growth and compare them to the molehills where I stagnated, community often made the difference.
At the end of the day, I can end up just totally wacky, because I've made mountains out of molehills. With meditation, I can keep them as molehills.
Making mountains out of molehills sells more books than a study of molehills.
...When we lift our voices tiny molehills of difference become great mountains of conflict.
If you look at where the growth is happening - tablet growth compared to the traditional PC growth - you just can't compare them.
I am Dusty's son, but I learned the hard way I was never going to be 'The American Dream.' That was difficult for me, and I made some molehills into mountains.
The mountains of today are the molehills of tomorrow.
I think it's an individual thing. Your mountains are my molehills.
When I look back at the people who shaped me, that made a difference in my life, most of them were women.
Plastic surgeons are always making mountains out of molehills.
Fox is great at making mountains out of molehills. Hannity is the best at it.
The market is always making mountains out of molehills and exaggerating ordinary vicissitudes into major setbacks.
I look back and see the kids who made it through school - it made a huge difference in their lives, which made me believe in the power of public education and what it can do for individuals and communities and the state.
It's wonderful to be back. Back among the mountains that remind us of our vulnerability, our ultimate lack of control over the world we live in. Mountains that demand humility, and yield so much peace in return.
For years I have made the point that progress in winding back economic slack is made not by high growth in any individual year, but by maintaining an expansion over a sustained period.
Faith can move mountains but let them happily fall down on the heads of other people. What's the point in moving mountains when it's so simple to climb over them?
I knew hundreds and hundreds of women like me, who had traveled in and out of prison in a revolving door. They needed support and help just like I had received. And it could make a difference, just like it had made a difference in my life. I wanted to see them come back to the community and have a chance at a different life, too.
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