A Quote by Tom Barbash

I'm suspicious of epiphanies, because they so rarely last. — © Tom Barbash
I'm suspicious of epiphanies, because they so rarely last.
Museums are custodians of epiphanies, and these epiphanies enter the central nervous system and deep recesses of the mind.
I'm not suspicious of success, I'm suspicious of the people who want to attach themselves because of your success.
Life just doesn't care about our aspirations, or sadness. It's often random, and it's often stupid and it's often completely unexpected, and the closures and the epiphanies and revelations we end up receiving from life, begrudgingly, rarely turn out to be the ones we thought.
One of the epiphanies I had was that I got into publishing because I love literature.
I'm not an activist by nature. I am suspicious of Utopian thinking and equally suspicious of its alternate.
To be suspicious is not a fault. To be suspicious all the time without coming to a conclusion is the defect.
Women are suspicious of this male ritual of the bachelor party and are suspicious of what men do and say when they are not being watched by them.
When people are suspicious with you, you start being suspicious with them.
Americans are very friendly and very suspicious, that is what Americans are and that is what always upsets the foreigner, who deals with them, they are so friendly how can they be so suspicious they are so suspicious how can they be so friendly but they just are.
Suspicion is not less an enemy to virtue than to happiness; he that is already corrupt is naturally suspicious, and he that becomes suspicious will quickly be corrupt.
I'm not an activist by nature. I am suspicious of Utopian thinking and equally suspicious of its alternate. I would prefer to stay in the Writing Burrow and play with my imaginary friends and enemies. I get sucked into these things.
I'm definitely suspicious of girls. I've been suspicious of girls my whole life, though, so it's not anything new.
I have always been slightly suspicious of the theory of evolution because of its ability to account for any property of living beings (the long neck of the giraffe, for example). I have therefore tried to see whether biological discoveries over the last thirty years or so fit in with Darwin's theory. I do not think that they do. To my mind, the theory does not stand up at all.
He that is already corrupt is naturally suspicious, and he that becomes suspicious will quickly become corrupt.
I have epiphanies all the time, because I'm always thinking. I'm a thinker. I'm always writing poetry, I'm always coming to conclusions.
Money is like a child—rarely unaccompanied. When it disappears, look to those who were supposed to be keeping an eye on it while you were at the grocery store. You might also look for someone who has a lot of extra children sitting around, with long, suspicious explanations for how they got there.
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