A Quote by Patricia L. Fry

Two halves do not make a whole when it comes to a healthy relationship: it takes two wholes. — © Patricia L. Fry
Two halves do not make a whole when it comes to a healthy relationship: it takes two wholes.
An intimate relationship does not banish loneliness. Only when we are comfortable with who we are can we truly function independently in a healthy way, can we truly function within a relationship. Two halves do not make a whole when it comes to a healthy relationship: it takes two wholes.
Two halves don't make a whole. Two wholes make a whole. In my relationship, I was giving myself away to make the relationship better, but in actuality, wasn't doing better by doing that. I became less of a man.
For a modern woman it is important to be supported and that there is equality in every aspect, and that it's not two halves that make a whole - it's two wholes that make a whole.
I must conquer my loneliness alone. I must be happy with myself or I have nothing to offer you. Two halves have little choice but to join; and yes, they do make a whole. But two wholes when they coincide... that is beauty. That is love.
Two halves don't make a whole. Two wholes make a whole.
Someone once said that two halves make a whole. And when two halves move in together, it makes a whole lot of stuff.
Linda and I aren't one and one. We are two halves that make a whole -- two halves fitted together are more efficient than either half would ever be alone!
A relationship is not two halves coming together to make a whole. Each of you is already complete.
Family was even a bigger word than I imagined, wide and without limitations, if you allowed it, defying easy definition. You had family that was supposed to be family and wasn't, family that wasn't family but was, halves becoming whole, wholes splitting into two; it was possible to lack whole, honest love and connection from family in lead roles, yet to be filled to abundance by the unexpected supporting players.
If you are only getting two takes and you are on a crazy set where there is a lot of noise and distractions and it is hard to focus - that is frustrating. But I don't mind two takes if there is a healthy respect with the work going on with the actors.
They were two halves that together formed a magical whole.
A relationship takes two people to make or break it.
The 'creator' and the 'editor' - two halves of the writer whole - should sleep in separate rooms.
Patch was in my life for a reason. I needed him. We were two halves of the same whole.
It takes two to make a relationship, but only one to screw it up.
United by their clasped hands, they became again the two halves, the light and the dark. The Destroyer and the Savior. A whole.
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