A Quote by Tom Clancy

When you have stopped learning you have begun to die. — © Tom Clancy
When you have stopped learning you have begun to die.
You never should feel like you've grown up because then you've stopped learning and you've stopped getting the best things out of life.
Learning to live ought to mean learning to die - to acknowledge, to accept, an absolute mortality - without positive outcome,or resurrection, or redemption, for oneself or for anyone else. That has been the old philosophical injunction since Plato: to be a philosopher is to learn how to die.
One of the things I teach my children is that I have always invested in myself, and I have never stopped learning, never stopped growing.
We're still going to be learning in Heaven. We will still be developing and are not yet absolutely perfect. That's what the future is all about - to continue the learning process that we have begun here. We've all still got a lot to learn!
You can't talk about truth without talking about learning how to die because it's precisely by learning how to die, examining yourself and transforming your old self into a better self, that you actually live more intensely and critically and abundantly.
Parliaments have stopped laughing at woman suffrage, and politicians have begun to dodge! It is the inevitable premonition of coming victory.
That's what life is, just one learning experience after another, and when you're through with all the learning experiences you graduate and what you get for a diploma is, you die.
Life is about learning; when you stop learning, you die.
Life is short and we have scarcely begun to live when we are called to die.
It is a tragedy that most of us die before we have begun to live.
I've never stopped learning.
If you think you've stopped learning, you're going to get lapped.
I tried lots of things and never stopped learning.
While I thought that I was learning how to live, I have been learning how to die.
I did some acting in college. But then everything stopped when I was a junior, in the fall of 2001, when I started becoming religious. Once I became a full-on Hasidic, I stopped everything. I stopped music. I stopped acting.
The mistake that was made in the '70s is we stopped policing the streets, we stopped cleaning the streets, we stopped cleaning the graffiti off buildings, we stopped supporting our cultural institutions and building parks and schools and all those kinds of things.
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