Top 1200 Waiting Rooms Quotes & Sayings - Page 7

Explore popular Waiting Rooms quotes.
Last updated on December 23, 2024.
The Internet is a perfect diversion from learning... it opens many doors that lead to empty rooms.
There is an advantage in having a routine and working with the same people when you can and in writing as a regular thing and filming as a regular thing. That routine pays off for you. You get a lot of productivity that way, rather than sitting around waiting for inspiration and waiting for the perfect thing to happen. I would be much less productive that way.
The sole cause of all human misery is the inability of people to sit quietly in their rooms. — © Blaise Pascal
The sole cause of all human misery is the inability of people to sit quietly in their rooms.
Waiting for the end, boys, waiting for the end.
When she is alone in the rooms I hear her humming to keep herself from thinking.
Search for role models you can look up to and people who take an interest in your career. But here's an important warning: you don't have to have mentors who look like you. Had I been waiting for a black, female Soviet specialist mentor, I would still be waiting. Most of my mentors have been old white men, because they were the ones who dominated my field.
I didn't want women to walk out of the dressing rooms feeling depressed and wanting a cocktail.
A lot of people think that black makes rooms feel smaller, but it's the opposite.
Small rooms or dwellings set the mind in the right path, large ones cause it to go astray.
You lethargic, waiting upon me, waiting for the fire and I attendant upon you, shaken by your beauty Shaken by your beauty Shaken.
Men at forty Learn to close softly The doors to rooms they will not be Coming back to.
Creativity always dies a quick death in rooms that house conference tables.
There was a house we all had in common and it was called the past, even though we'd lived in different rooms. — © Angela Carter
There was a house we all had in common and it was called the past, even though we'd lived in different rooms.
When I'm in London, Claridge's is a great favourite. I'm a big fan of art deco architecture and the rooms are extraordinary.
I love hotel rooms, so I take pictures of the room and the way out and the lobby, the food and drink.
I'm not conniving - that has a pejorative context. I'm not sitting in back rooms making deals. That's not my style.
Many writers do little else but sit in small rooms recalling the real world.
[Walter White] had keep [people] waiting while you got the impression that he was terribly busy with calls to Washington. I've seen such exhibitions in that direction as having someone come out of his office to the switchboard operator - which at that time was sort of located in the center of wherever people were waiting - and ask to call such-and-such a place, or a call through to Mr. So-and-so, or somebody like this, you see.
Interiors speak! Rooms emphasize whether one exists or lives, and there is a great difference between the two!
Long sentences in a short composition are like large rooms in a little house.
When I was a kid, I would sing in people's living rooms and for different little family things.
I challenge those who are in business and other professions to see that there are copies of the Book of Mormon in their reception rooms.
If culture was a house, then language was the key to the front door, [and] to all rooms inside.
I'm much better known in France and Germany and Spain than I am in the U.S. When I go to Russia, I get mobbed; I have groups of fans waiting for me out in the hotel lobby, waiting for me to come down off the elevator. In China, I almost got beat up because people were trying to get me to do a drawing for them.
Comics are regularly asked to perform for impossible rooms. They're called 'hell gigs.'
Our destiny and ultimate fate depend upon our daily decisions. . . .Tomorrow's joy or tomorrow's despair has its roots in decisions we make today. . . . Those who stand at the threshold of life always waiting for the right time to change are like the man who stands at the bank of a river waiting for the water to pass so he can cross on dry land.
I like to repaint rooms, to redecorate. My dream would be to have pieds-à-terre in various places.
Readers are bullied in schoolyards and in locker-rooms as much as in government offices and prisons.
in crowded rooms they would form words with their lips for each other's eyes
A comic, you have to be looking down at him. My favorite rooms, the audience is above the stage, stadium-style.
I like working in those dark, smoke-filled rooms in the back. That's what I'm good at.
There’s no way that Michael Jackson or whoever Jackson should have a million thousand droople billion dollars and then there’s people starving. There’s no way! There’s no way that these people should own planes and there people don’t have houses. Apartments. Shacks. Drawers. Pants! I know you’re rich. I know you got 40 billion dollars, but can you just keep it to one house? You only need ONE house. And if you only got two kids, can you just keep it to two rooms? I mean why have 52 rooms and you know there’s somebody with no room?! It just don’t make sense to me. It don’t.
From its humble origins in college dorm rooms, social media has quietly crept into the boardroom.
I don't like waiting in airports for my bags. Even worse, I don't like waiting in airports when my bags are lost.
I used to be more insecure about working, and I guess the older I get, the more rich my life becomes, I don't need to work as much as I used to. I mean, New York is a hard town to be in when you have nothing else to do besides show business. It's brutal, especially as an actor, because you sit around with this low - grade fever of anxiety, waiting for the phone to ring. Or waiting for something.
I was going to university to study psychology and my big ambition in life was to open treatment rooms for psychotherapy.
It is not enough just to open the door to the rooms of power. We have to get inside and rearrange the furniture!
Dressing rooms can be vicious places, in the best possible way, from a slagging point of view. — © Brian O'Driscoll
Dressing rooms can be vicious places, in the best possible way, from a slagging point of view.
In the locker rooms, I'm always suggesting, "You need Berlei." Because it's the best brand for women and for me.
The 'creator' and the 'editor' - two halves of the writer whole - should sleep in separate rooms.
If I got involved with the chat rooms and Facebook and everything - I would probably never leave. That's why I don't do it. I literally don't do it. At all.
Instant messaging and chat rooms have basically created a level playing field for deaf people.
The German public knows me quite well. I have been in their kitchens and living rooms for years.
Virginity is now a mere preamble or waiting room to be got out of as soon as possible; it is without significance. Old age is similarly a waiting room, where you go after life's over and wait for cancer or a stroke. The years before and after the menstrual years are vestigial: the only meaningful condition left to women is that of fruitfulness.
There was a beauty here bigger than the hurtling beauty of basketball, a beauty refined from country pastures, a game of solitariness, of waiting, waiting for the pitcher to complete his gaze toward first base and throw his lightning, a game whose very taste, of spit and dust and grass and sweat and leather and sun, was America.
I stand here empty, waiting to b filled. I stand here weary of days bombarded with sorrows & ill. Yet, I STAND. For I know it is not of my strength; I know it is not my will. So with my eyes fixed on the prize and a rejoicing soul, I stand with a prayerful heart, waiting for my blessing. I stand, knowing my blessing will com.
One of the consequences of if the Affordable Care Act is repealed, is that all of us now are at risk of being a preexisting - of having a preexisting condition waiting to happen. Life, increasingly, is a preexisting condition waiting to happen, now that we have more and more of this data available.
I always found the road exciting. I liked stinking hotels and freezing dressing rooms. — © Suzi Quatro
I always found the road exciting. I liked stinking hotels and freezing dressing rooms.
I went from being a hustler, working different jobs to renting rooms off Craigslist, and I just wasn't happy.
Some books seem like a key to unfamiliar rooms in one’s own castle.
Ah, the life of a newspaper cartoonist - how I miss the groupies, drugs and trashed hotel rooms!
Me being able to trash hotel rooms on set means I don't do it in real life.
All rooms ought to look as if they were lived in, and to have so to say, a friendly welcome ready for the incomer.
Oftentimes, it feels like we spend so much of our life waiting to make art, waiting for somebody to let us do something. You don't really have to do that. You can make it all the time. And 99 percent of the time, it's not going to be a big deal on a global scale. But 100 percent of the time, it's going to make you feel amazing.
But I can also write in crappy motel rooms, while standing in line, or sitting in the dentist's chair.
I spent a long time looking at faces, drinking in smiles. Am I happy or unhappy? It’s not a very important question. I live with such frenzied intensity. Things and people are waiting for me, and doubtless I am waiting for them and desiring them with all my strength and sadness. But, here, I earn the right to be alive by silence and by secrecy. The miracle of not having to talk about oneself.
We know the number of conference rooms and phone booths that make a building successful.
As a session player for so many years, I have found myself in rooms looking around going, 'Is this for real?'
I'm gonna put extra blankets, free, in all your rooms, and there'll be no cover charge.
The architect Borromini's Quattro Fontane, a little church in Rome, is one of the most beautiful rooms in history.
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