A Quote by Robert Breault

Am I keeping my promises? — © Robert Breault
Am I keeping my promises?
Most of us are pretty good at keeping promises to others and pretty bad at keeping promises to ourselves.
Turn your love into promises, that when you doubt your love, you may simply ask, "Am I keeping my promises?"
In each of [my] actions, I'm keeping my promises to the American people. These are campaign promises.
Making promises to myself, in my personal writing practice, has been important to me all my life. In practical application it is so much easier for me to make promises to others, and keep them, than it is to make promises to myself. "Why is that?" and the answer I gave myself is that in making promises to others I create a model of accountability and reinforcement. I duplicate that in my writing and have grown increasingly better at making and keeping promises to myself.
We don’t need any more promises. We need to start keeping the promises we already made.
Satan promises the best, but pays with the worst; he promises honor, and pays with disgrace; he promises pleasure, and pays with pain; he promises profit, and pays with loss, he promises life, and pays with death. But God pays as he promises; all his payments are made in pure gold.
Some promises aren’t worth keeping.
Promises are empty words if you're not keeping them.
If being recalled is the price for keeping one's promises, then so be it.
We do have promises to keep. And my dad and Barack Obama are keeping them.
The 'Inside-Out' approach to personal and interpersonal effectiveness means to start first with self; even more fundamentally, to start with the most inside part of self, with your paradigms, your character, and your motives. The inside-out approach says that private victories precede public victories, that making and keeping promises to ourselves recedes making and keeping promises to others. It says it is futile to put personality ahead of character, to try to improve relationships with others before improving ourselves.
Making promises and keeping them is a great way to build a brand.
Part of Washington keeping its promises is a focus on directing more dollars into our local classrooms.
The man who promises everything is sure to fulfil nothing, and everyone who promises too much is in danger of using evil means in order to carry out his promises, and is already on the road to perdition.
Thou ought to be nice, even to superstition, in keeping thy promises, and therefore equally cautious in making them.
Every organization of men, be it social or political, ultimately relies on man's capacity for making promises and keeping them.
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