A Quote by Vince Gilligan

You can cheat in solitaire, but there's nothing satisfying about cheating in solitaire. — © Vince Gilligan
You can cheat in solitaire, but there's nothing satisfying about cheating in solitaire.
What is it about the blank page that makes me want to hurl myself into a game of solitaire? I ask myself these kinds of questions while I'm playing solitaire.
Golf is like solitaire. When you cheat, you cheat only yourself.
The more you pursue distractions, the less effective any particular distraction is, and so I'd had to up various dosages, until, before I knew it, I was checking my e-mail every ten minutes, and my plugs of tobacco were getting ever larger, and my two drinks a night had worsened to four, and I'd achieved such deep mastery of computer solitaire that my goal was no longer to win a game but to win two or more games in a row--a kind of meta-solitaire whose fascination consisted not in playing the cards but in surfing the streaks of wins and losses.
We're not playing solitaire out here.
I try to keep my mind active. I'm a solitaire and puzzle addict. I exercise religiously. I don't do many things religiously and I've taken up golf to have something to do when I have nothing to do.
I play solitaire and wait for something to happen.
I do games of solitaire when I get home to quiet my spirits.
I'm really good at solitaire and I can turn my arms in full circles.
I'm not at all competitive. I'd rather play Solitaire than ping-pong.
My biggest vice is playing solitaire on my iPad. It's bad. I mean, it's ridiculous.
I have an Apple computer, which I use to play Spider Solitaire and do research on the Internet.
I prefer single statement pieces like solitaire earrings and a elegant ring.
Mr. Brad Delp. J'ai une ame solitaire. I am a lonely soul.
As I look back, I see that life is like a game of solitaire and every once in a while there is a move.
I have switched on this modern laptop machine. And I have told myself that I must resist the temptation to start playing solitaire upon it.
Anger infests Lee Bowyer's simple mind. He could get sent off playing solitaire.
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