A Quote by Tony Robbins

The minute you start keeping score, you're destroying the relationship. — © Tony Robbins
The minute you start keeping score, you're destroying the relationship.
I do not need help destroying my relationship. I was raised by my father. I've completed a thirty-year seminar on the power of destroying relationships.
The sad truth is that most Christians spend their entire lives trying to score points with Someone who is not keeping score.
The minute I ever start thinking about what a character would do is the minute I bring my ego into play. It's the minute I'm putting a judgment on something.
No relationship is easy, and nobody should ever think it is. The minute you start forgetting the needs of the other person is when you get in trouble.
Couples often live out years of falsehood trying to protect and save a relationship, all the while destroying any chance of real relationship.
I think every professional player wants to play every game and every minute because you never know when you're going to get a chance to score, in the first minute or the 90th.
The thing I expect from myself, when I play, is to score, in every game. If I don't, then it happens. But when you start a game, if you are a striker, you need to score.
The minute I start being afraid of what people might say is the minute I become useless to God.
The minute you start caring about what other people think, is the minute you stop being yourself.
The wind is the appalling enemy. It is mind-destroying, physically-destroying, soul-destroying.
If you're keeping score, win!
It's very hard to sustain love, that's for sure. But the more you have your own life and your own self, and the less you give away who you are, the more men are attracted to you. The more desperate you are for a relationship, the worse it is to find a healthy relationship. Because the minute you become one-and-a-half people instead of two, it's a mess. Nobody's happy. Keeping your identity and having your own life and your own self, that's the only way I can make my life and sustain life.
Sometimes I'll do five minutes of skipping at the start of the day - one minute on and one minute off, and it's great, it really wakes up the system.
Keeping score is for games, not friendships.
My only focus after I start the putter away from the ball is keeping the back of my left wrist as fat as possible from start to finish. This is critical to keeping the putterhead and ball moving straight down the target line after impact. It's also how Rory Mcllroy squares his putterface, and obviously it works for him.
Money is just a way of keeping score.
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