To be pessimist is to amputate one's own legs and arms! Only an optimist man has the ability to move!
The point of living and of being an optimist is to be foolish enough to believe the best is yet to come.
I want to admit that I am an optimist. Any tough problem, I think it can be solved.
Life doesn't always end up where you want it to go; you have to be an optimist and keep moving forward.
I see myself as, one, an optimist, and two, a member of a huge family, and that's important to me.
You know, you have to be an optimist, a pessimist, sarcastic and pleasant all at the same time to be a photographer.
Because one has to be an optimist to begin an ambitious project, it is not surprising that underestimation of completion time is the norm.
The point of living, and of being an optimist, is to be foolish enough to believe the best is yet to come.
I'm very much an optimist. I don't think I could do my work if I didn't believe there was some kind of hope for humanity.
As a tech optimist, I believe productivity woes can be solved through cleverly imagined and implemented technology.
I am an optimist. Anyone interested in the future has to be otherwise he would simply shoot himself.
And the funny thing is, I've always been an optimist - it's practically a congenital disorder with me.
An extreme optimist is a man who believes that humanity will probably survive even if it doesn't take his advice.
O, merry is the Optimist, With the troops of courage leaguing. But a dour trend In any friend Is somehow less fatiguing.
I became an optimist when I discovered that I wasn't going to win any more games by being anything else.
I'd say I'm a revolutionary optimist. I believe that the good guys -the people- are going to win.
Optimist: someone who isn't sure whether life is a tragedy or a comedy but is tickled silly just to be in the play.
I am and always will be the optimist. The hoper of far-flung hopes and the dreamer of improbable dreams.
A man who has spent most of his adult life trying out a series of patent medicines is always an optimist.
I'm an optimist; I always hope that each new script is going to be a great story.
The optimist lives on the peninsula of infinite possibilities; the pessimist is stranded on the island of perpetual indecision.
Supergirl is this unattainable, idealistic optimist of an alien, and all of us can escape into her world, and she always saves the day.
I am an eternal optimist. I always say 'Yihyeh Tov' or 'It'll get better.'
The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist fears it is true.
I'm an eternal optimist. I've no regrets. I've people who love me. I've a wonderful life. I'm grateful for what I have.
How do you tell an optimist that he or she has lived a happy life by mistake?
Both optimists and pessimists contribute to society. The optimist invents the aeroplane, the pessimist the parachute.
I refuse to use terms like 'optimist' or 'pessimist' and instead prefer 'realist.'
I used to be an optimist, but now I know that nothing is going to turn out as I expect.
I have always had a passion for the beautiful. If the man in me is often a pessimist, the artist, on the contrary, is pre-eminently an optimist.
I am neither an optimist nor a pessimist. Jesus Christ is risen from the dead.
I think I probably hoped for it a little bit, but I'm not an optimist. I'm a realist... or maybe even a pessimist.
Here's hoping all the days ahead, won't be as bitter as the one's behind you. Be an optimist instead, and somehow happiness will find you.
The pessimist complains about the wind; the optimist expects it to change; the realist adjusts the sails.
That optimist of yours is always ready to turn hell's backyard into a play-ground.
I'm an optimist, and I'll stay in situations for much longer than I should, just thinking that they'll work themselves out.
I've never been an optimist, but that's fine because pessimists have the possibility of being agreeably surprised.
The the question whether I am a pessimist or an optimist, I answer that my knowledge is pessimistic, but my willing and hope are optimistic.
The pessimist is the man who believes things couldn't possibly be worse, to which the optimist replies: 'Oh yes they could!'
It is much more sensible to be an optimist instead of a pessimist, for if one is doomed to disappointment, why experience it in advance?
Today, I don't have any psychological scars, because I am a realist and an optimist. After all, I can't lose my legs twice.
Am I like the optimist who, while falling ten stories from a building, says at each story, I'm all right so far?
There are some harsh realities about this business, and they've been beaten into my psyche. But I'm more of an optimist than a pessimist.
I am an optimist and I always think the good will come out
I've always believed my success in the entertainment business is an inevitability. You have to believe that; you have to be an optimist.
It's better to be an optimist who is sometimes wrong than a pessimist who is always right
I am an optimist. It does not seem too much use being anything else.
I am by temperament an optimist, and I thought from the beginning that there was much to be written about suicide that was strangely heartening.
I always call myself either an optimistic pessimist or a pessimistic optimist - I'm not sure which way it goes.
One thing that makes it possible to be an optimist is if you have a contingency plan for when all hell breaks loose.
I tend to be a great optimist when it comes to the United States and the American way of life, I think precisely because I wasn't born into it.
I am the eternal optimist. I think that, over time, people respond to civility and -- and rational argument.
I'm a long-term optimist, and I don't think the problems with our society are from being overly optimistic.
To the optimist, obstacles aare challenges, roadblocks are inspirations, and problems are invitations to achievement.
In social affairs, I'm an optimist. I really do believe that our military- industrial civilization will soon collapse.
An optimist is a man who sees everything half as bad and twice as good as it is.
I'm an optimist, so I believe in some sort of life after death; I don't know what kind.
I'm an optimist in my heart - I'm a hopeless pollyanna just like my mother - but a pessimist in my head. I think that's the dialectic we all need to be in.
The optimist proclaims that we live in the best of all possible worlds, and the pessimist fears this is true.
An optimist may see a light where there is none, but why must the pessimist always run to blow it out?
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