A Quote by Mary McLeod Bethune

I never stop to plan. I take things step-by-step. — © Mary McLeod Bethune
I never stop to plan. I take things step-by-step.
I never stop to plan. I take things step by step.
First step: Build the wall. Second step: Let ICE do its job. Third step: Stop importing jihadists and welfare recipients. Fourth step: enforce e-verify to protect American jobs. Fifth step: prosecute social security card/ID theft/voting fraud.
With a definite, step-by-step plan - ah, what a difference it makes! You cannot fail, because each step carries you along to the next, like a track.
If you've got a plan, it's not just like a pipe dream. You have a step-by-step list of things to do to get to your goal.
I take my time to do things and I never plan in advance. It's one step at a time for me. I'd like to stick to that.
What saves a man is to take a step. Then another step. It is always the same step, but you have to take it.
Start moving, a step at a time, step after step. The positive momentum will take you from there.
I used to try and take things in leaps and bounds. Now I've realized it's got to be step by step.
I've always been a step ahead. A lot of people haven't experienced the things I've experienced, and made me a stronger person. The life I've been exposed to has let me know what step to take and how not to go back a step. I take life one day at a time, and I prepare myself for each one of those days.
A journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step and if that step is the right step, it becomes the last step.
Every third step I ran, my breath exploded out of me all in a rush. One step to suck in another cold lungful. One step to let it excape. One step of not breathing.
Being a stepparent is knowing when to step in, when to step back, when to step up, when to step out.
As far as the level of success, any step that TNA took, it always felt like it was a small step, but it was a small step forward. I always felt like the smart thing that TNA did was that they never let their reach exceed their grasp, so to speak. They never tried to take on too much at one time.
I have found that you have only to take that one step toward the gods, and they will then take ten steps toward you. That step, the heroic first step of the journey, is out of, or over the edge of, your boundaries, and it often must be taken before you know that you will.
But what began in 1941 was a process of destruction not planned in advance, not organized centrally by any agency. There was no blueprint and there was no budget for destructive measures. They were taken step by step, one step at a time. Thus came about not so much a plan being carried out, but an incredible meeting of minds, a consensus - mind reading by a far-flung bureaucracy.
There's a sense of knowing when to stop and take a break from things, to step back from the work you're making, and of changing things up to keep them interesting for yourself.
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