A Quote by Wayne Dyer

Hit the delete button every time fear appears. — © Wayne Dyer
Hit the delete button every time fear appears.
Hit the 'delete' button when you have unrighteous thoughts.
I'm strong enough and have a pretty thick skin, but when people go after my kids, I just hit block-delete, block-delete. It's my mantra.
There is no delete button for bigotry.
The lack of a delete button on the internet is a significant issue.
You will not solve global climate change by hitting the delete button.
Delete, delete, delete and at the end find the ‘core aspect of the design’
I think it's foolish to think that if you've done something for so long, you can kind of delete it out of your memory bank or delete every emotion attached to it. I knew when I retired what that meant.
I would delete Donald Trump. I would delete Hillary Clinton. I would delete the man who was responsible for Brexit.
When I was working on 'Freddie,' I had been trying to write it on a computer for many, many years, but that delete button just won't let anything go forward.
When I faced the likes of Shoaib Akhtar and Brett Lee for the first time, I had a little bit of fear in my mind. My thoughts were, 'Would I be able to face them? Would I be able to play them? Would I be able to hit boundaries?' There were so many questions and fear, also, that if the ball didn't hit my bat, it might hit me on the body.
I feel like I don't hit the radio button ever - or not enough, even on the good stuff. I do shout some stuff when I'm mad at myself, but I'm pretty good about not hitting the radio button.
Artists don't always know. Almost every song I ever recorded that was a hit at the majors that the promotional people picked I didn't think it would be a hit. I was wrong every time!
If the Earth gets hit by an asteroid, it's game over. It's control-alt-delete for civilization.
Every time we walk on to the field of battle and the field of battle is the internet, it doesn't matter if we shoot our opponents a hundred times and hit every time. As long as they've hit us once, we've lost, because the U.S. is so much more reliant on those systems.
We all get so caught up in the moment of what we're doing every day, it's hard to hit that reset button and get pulled away from all that and see life from a different perspective.
What must it be like, I wonder, to live in a world where food appears at the press of a button?
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