Top 1200 Important Choices Quotes & Sayings - Page 2

Explore popular Important Choices quotes.
Last updated on April 20, 2025.
We'll all make better choices about diet, exercise, and personal health when someone else isn't paying for the consequences of those choices.
The mistake that the Bush administration should admit to is not so much that they made the wrong choices. They made the right analysis; they made the right choices. But what they did wrong was the execution of those choices. That was wrong.
Don’t think so. We all make our choices, and those choices have consequences. — © Kami Garcia
Don’t think so. We all make our choices, and those choices have consequences.
The ability to provide choices and the right to make choices that prove not detrimental, are the fundamental ingredients of free trade and independence.
Choices, more choices than we like afterward to believe, are made far backward in the innocence of childhood.
As an artist, environment has a lot of impact on choices, and these choices can change by changing your location.
You have two choices. you can keep running and hiding and blaming the world for your problems, or you can stand up for yourself and decide to be somebody important.
I am the result of the good choices I've made and the bad choices.
There is nothing more important in my life than being a father. I will never allow any of my career choices or aspirations to threaten this bond.
Parents matter, buildings count, curriculum choices, materials, resources - all these things are important in a top-class education. But, in the end, it comes down to the teachers.
We all only have a certain amount of money and that means yes, we have to make choices and sometimes those choices mean we don't get what we want.
We all have choices we have to make, and with those choices come certain sacrifices.
The master who fears the choices his people will make enough to take those choices away isn't worth serving. — © Brent Weeks
The master who fears the choices his people will make enough to take those choices away isn't worth serving.
People who do not see their choices do not believe they have choices.
I learned about choices and consequences and responsibility. I learned that we all have choices, even when we don't recognize them, and that those choices have consequences, not just for ourselves, but for others. We must assume responsibility for those consequences.
You really don't create an authoritarian society unless you control the personal choices including the sexual choices of the people.
You and I are infinite choice-makers. In every moment of our existence, we are in that field of all possibilities where we have access to an infinity of choices. Some of these choices are made consciously, while others are made unconsciously. But the best way to understand and maximize the use of karmic law is to become consciously aware of the choices we make every moment.
You can't blame anyone else, ... , no one but yourself. You have to make your own choices and live every agonizing day with the consequences of those choices.
Our lives are fashioned by our choices. First we make our choices. Then our choices make us.
We live in a society where healthy choices aren't usually the most popular choices.
The important message of the energy of attraction is in learning to master your choices in the present to create a personal reality that reflects this expanded consciousness.
The ground for taking ignorance to be restrictive of freedom is that it causes people to make choices which they would not have made if they had seen what the realization of their choices involved.
When people have too many choices, they make bad choices.
Making mistakes is part of learning to choose well. No way around it. Choices are thrust upon us, and we don't always get things right. Even postponing or avoiding a decision can become a choice that carries heavy consequences. Mistakes can be painful-sometimes they cause irrevocable harm-but welcome to Earth. Poor choices are part of growing up, and part of life. You will make bad choices, and you will be affected by the poor choices of others. We must rise above such things.
We need choices of government, just like we have choices of tables or chairs or cell phones or coffee.
Should I eat first or accuse the Master of the City of murder? Choices, choices. -Anita
There is an important message that all political leaders should be taking from the response to coronavirus, and that is that people are prepared to make hard choices for the common good.
Men are free to decide their own moral choices, but they are also under the necessity to account to God for those choices.
Everyone has choices to make; no one has the right to take those choices away from us. Not even out of love.
I loved my life, but my choices were overloading and overwhelming me. Listening to inner feelings and fulfilling some of these urges when they come along is incredibly important.
You know give me choices that are truly different from one another, otherwise they don't regard them as meaningful choices.
Sometimes you get to a place in life where you feel you've made some choices, and maybe they weren't the right choices, and that it's all coming to an end.
I realized a long time ago that, even as a kid, it's all about the choices you make, the things you pursue. In the end, you're a sum of your choices.
I have found success is ultimately realized by people who make more right choices . . . and recover quickly from their bad choices.
This life is a test, and we're put down here to make choices. The truth is, the bad choices of other people can hurt us.
I was a working class Jewish girl. In my girlhood, anti-Semitism was a daily fact of life in Detroit. I did not come from people who had many options in their lives or many choices open to them. I was a girl in a family in which women were, as in society at large, very much second-class citizens. I did not see why I should accept these forced limitations without a fight. Being free to make my own choices thus became very important to me at an early age.
For me, going home at 5:30 is as much about my own choices, but also giving my team those choices, too.
You can't make positive choices for the rest of your life without an environment that makes those choices easy, natural, and enjoyable. — © Deepak Chopra
You can't make positive choices for the rest of your life without an environment that makes those choices easy, natural, and enjoyable.
Change is not overcoming inertia as much as it is redirecting, guiding, tweaking what already is and what has already happened. We must believe that we can make choices and that those choices can alter the future.
I think that's what makes a successful marriage: a mindful sense of self and the ability to make clear choices to stay together or choices not to.
People do make considered choices about whether they want to fight, and how, and they do so from disparate circumstances. But I think there are two important frameworks in which those choices get made. One, their degree of immiseration. The greatest predictor of who will engage in criminal activity is poverty, which tells us that the decisions people make about how unlawful they're willing to be are decisively based in their own experience of immiseration. The second framework is that when people choose to act, they inevitably act where they are.
Since your outcomes are all a result of your moment-to-moment choices, you have incredible power to change your life by changing those choices. Step by step, day by day, your choices will shape your actions until they become habits, where practice makes them permanent.
I think it is important to be fearless in life. I have always made fearless choices. Some have worked; the others haven't.
All elections are about choices, and good campaigns will make those choices clear.
I think life is a matter of choices and that wherever we are, good or bad, is because of choices we make.
I believe feminism is grounded in supporting the choices of women even if we wouldn’t make certain choices for ourselves.
In heaven, there is no judgment, but rather an opportunity to examine our lives-who we touched, the choices we made, and the consequences of those choices.
We all have choices. (Astrid) No we don’t, princess. Only people with money and influence have choices. For the rest of us, basic necessity dictates what we have to do to survive. (Zarek)
Labour's disastrous legacy and the Conservative success did not happen by accident: it was about the choices each party made, choices that impact on everyone. — © Esther McVey
Labour's disastrous legacy and the Conservative success did not happen by accident: it was about the choices each party made, choices that impact on everyone.
Every choice that we makes creates consequences, consequences in the lives of others and we experience them in ourselves, those same consequences, every choice that we make. And by the way the choices that you might think are the most important are not always the most important.
We all create the person we become by our choices as we go through life. In a real sense, by the time we are adults, we are the sum total of the choices we have made.
You rarely have time for everything you want in this life, so you need to make choices. And hopefully your choices can come from a deep sense of who you are.
Sometimes the things presented to us as choices aren't choices at all.
I think back story can help guide your choices, but when you're playing a scene, you're not making choices; you're just intuitive.
Whether we're on the path toward victory or defeat is determined by the very next choice we make. Not the choices from yesterday. Not the choices five minutes ago.
I'm trying to mediate between individual agency and structural determination. I accept that people make individual choices, quite thoughtful, quite careful, quite difficult choices, but they don't make them without constraints that shape what choices are possible and provide the intensity of the push toward choosing.
As consumers, we are faced with hundreds of choices - and when it comes to books, thousands of choices.
There are no safe choices. Only other choices.
My mother seemed to undermine so much of what I did, subtly belittling my choices and my activities in light of her greater, more important ones.
Transformational leaders are important because they make choices that most other leaders would not.
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