Life Stories Quotes

Quotes tagged as "life-stories" Showing 1-30 of 47
Erik Pevernagie
“After facing the relentless pandemic showdowns, many long for the glow of a new dawn and crave bright life stories with liberating slapsticks to shatter silenced desolation and pent-up rage, restoring self-value and broken identity.”
Erik Pevernagie, Stilling our Mind

James Allen Moseley
“Judaea was not a forgotten backwater in the Roman world. Jews represented about ten percent of the population of the western empire and about twenty percent of the population of the eastern empire. By comparison, Jews represent only about two per cent of the population of the United States today. Never, since the fall of Judah to Babylon in the sixth century BC until the twentieth century had Jews comprised so large a part of any body politic.”
James Allen Moseley, Biographies of Jesus' Apostles: Ambassadors in Chains

Erik Pevernagie
“Our life stories help us integrate our experiences and understand our place in the world. They give coherence and direction to our lives. ( "Everybody his story")”
Erik Pevernagie

James Allen Moseley
“Jesus’ ministry lasted 1,350 days, spanning five calendar years (AD 29–33), fifty calendar months, and 44.36 months (calculated as being of 30.5 days’ average duration). The gospels have gaps in their narratives in which Jesus disappears from the pages of history. The gaps total 770 days, which is about two years, representing fifty-seven percent of Jesus’ total ministry time. No wonder John wrote “Jesus did many other signs in the presence of the disciples, which are not written in this book” (John 20:30) and “There are many more things that Jesus did. If all of them were written down, I suppose that not even the world itself would have space for the books that would be written” (John 21:25).”
James Allen Moseley

Charmaine Wilkerson
“More people’s lives have been shaped by violence than we like to think. And more people’s lives have been shaped by silence than we think.”
Charmaine Wilkerson, Black Cake

Erin Morgenstern
“Do you ever think about how many stories are out there?' she asks, placing a finger on the glass. 'How many dramas are unfolding around us right at this very moment? I wonder how long a book you would need to record them. You'd probably need an entire library to hold a single evening in Manhattan. An hour. A minute.”
Erin Morgenstern, The Starless Sea

James Allen Moseley
“All apostles were disciples. Not all disciples were apostles. Disciples (Greek: mathetes) were pupils, hence, followers. Apostles (Greek: apostolos) were ambassadors, hence, leaders.”
James Allen Moseley, Biographies of Jesus' Apostles: Ambassadors in Chains

Yaa Gyasi
“And it wasn't fair. That was the thing that was at the heart of my reluctance and my resentment. Some people make it out of their stories unscathed, thriving. Some people don't.”
Yaa Gyasi, Transcendent Kingdom

Craig D. Lounsbrough
“When I visit the cemetery, I walk past hundreds, possibly thousands of stories now silenced. And I know that history ‘recorded’ holds the adventures that history ‘lost’ let's slip through its fingers. And I’ve thought that I need to live a life worthy of being ‘recorded’ so that the adventure that might help another never slips through the fingers of anything.”
Craig D. Lounsbrough

Stephanie Butland
“It's good to be reminded that the world is full of stories that are, potentially, at least as painful as yours.”
Stephanie Butland, Lost For Words

Eleanor Davis
“Write a story
A story about yourself

A story about your life
Now, believe it

Now write another story, same subject
A better story
More interesting
Stronger characters.
Now, believe that.

Just keep writing
You have plenty of time”
Eleanor Davis, How to Be Happy

Eleanor Davis
“Find the stories that help you comprehend the incomprehensible

Find the stories that make you stronger.”
Eleanor Davis, How to Be Happy

Jason
“But if you've got a bagful of stories it means you've led a rich life, and I'm way behind on that count.”
Jason, Why Are You Doing This?

Morgan Talty
“We are made of stories, and if we don't know them--the ones that make us--how can we ever be fully realized? How can we ever be who we really are?”
Morgan Talty, Fire Exit

“Storytelling is one means to entertain, share knowledge, and transmit cultural ideology. Through the universal lens of storytelling, do we become familiar with the life altering dilemmas and moral challenges that fuselage provides the linkage to mode the character patterns essential to leading a principled life? By shuffling through scores of loose leafed stories, can we glean the clarity of thought and the lucidity of perception needed successfully to tackle our own life with gusto? Is reading stories of struggle and redemption one way that we become acquainted with the chemistry of pain and suffering that permeates the arteries of all thinking human beings? Does appreciation for other people’s hardbound stories assist us place the vertebrae of our own experiences into a telling template? Can we draw upon the accumulated experiences of other people’s lives as well as our own hands-on experiences when we see our lives folded into a comprehensible scabbard depicting what it means to be human and, therefore, fallible?”
Kilroy J. Oldster, Dead Toad Scrolls

“We are playwrights scripting our personal reality show and enigmatic fantasy world. Without a questing protagonist and a strong antagonist, the plot is tepid. All heroic conduct requires a journey filled with hardship, adventure, and a personal nemesis to conquer.”
Kilroy J. Oldster, Dead Toad Scrolls

Mehmet Murat ildan
“Your own life story is not read by the world till you add some exceptional things to the life stories of others!”
Mehmet Murat ildan

Avijeet Das
“She loved riding her cycle in the evenings, when the breeze was cool and the humidity was less.

The color of the cycle reminded her of the sky. While riding, she felt as if she were flying. She loved this feeling of flying: as if she were a bird flying in the sky.

Life is so beautiful, she realized. But she could not understand why people fought wars. Why people hated one another?

The birds did not hate each other; they just loved flying under the wide blue sky and above the vast green grass.

She often wondered about life and the answers to life's questions. But her mind could never find answers to her questions.”
Avijeet Das

Kate Bowler
“Our crowns are just flowers. We are here and then gone in a burst of wind.
But I want things. I want more stories. I want life itself.”
Kate Bowler

Avijeet Das
“As a writer and a poet, I like listening rather than talking. Invariably I like to listen to the life stories and instances of many people whom I meet in life. And the people I meet shape the characters and the stories that I write.”
Avijeet Das

Lily Amis
“It was extremely challenging to spend months in a refugee house (in a room of 15 m) with complete strangers; families that I didn’t know. My happy world fell apart. Everything and everyone I knew was gone. My childhood was over, and I had to grow up fast in a country, where I felt unwelcomed and rejected from minute one.”
Lily Amis, The Stolen Years In Zurich

Lily Amis
“When the government tells you to your face, after a decade, to either marry or leave the country, and you marry the wrong guy for the wrong reasons, your whole future is screwed.”
Lily Amis, The Stolen Years In Zurich

Lily Amis
“I have never experienced true love, a caring and supportive partner or at least a career. All I’m left with are my books and my song lyrics!”
Lily Amis

“And sometimes...

Life's subtle nuances too paint the vibrant masterpiece.
Of the existence.
Every shade, a story. Every detail, a character.

The intricate painting of being.”
Monika Ajay Kaul

“Zindagi ke kisse, chand lamhon mein rachay,
Aate hain log, rang bharne, phir chale jaate hain saath chhod ke.

Mulaqatein adhuri si, baatein teri yaadon mein khoyi,
Tanha safar, kyun lagta hai, kahani mein hai kuch khaas baat.

Tooti doriyan, rishton ke silsile mein chhupi hain,
Har musafir le kar aata hai, ek anokhi kahani, phir raahein hi bhatak jaati hain.”
Huzefa Nalkheda wala

“Envy is the art of comparing your behind-the-scenes with someone else's highlight reel, forgetting that each life unfolds its own unique story.”
Monika Ajay Kaul

“Walls are more than stone and mortar. They are silent sentinels, their eyes following every movement, their mouths sealed yet harboring countless reminiscences.

They're silent storytellers. They witness hushed secrets and grand pronouncements, absorbing the laughter and tears that reverberate within their confines.

Their textures saying under its breath, of the lives lived within. The worn wallpaper narrating chronicles. The chipped paint flecks capture fleeting moments, and the floor creak with impressions unseen.

The silence of walls holds the weight of history.
A chronicle of lives lived within their embrace.”
Monika Ajay Kaul

“All across the mission, dozens of horror stories were being written.
I just had to deal with mine.”
Jason Fox, Battle Scars: A Story of War and All That Follows

Kimi Cunningham Grant
“This is the moment Emlyn will play over and over in her mind. The moment where her life swivels from its course and heads in an entirely different direction. Life is full of these moments. Little points like those connect-the-dots activities from grade school. Each speck building on the next to form the shape of a person's story.”
Kimi Cunningham Grant, The Nature of Disappearing

“My task is to help you stay in the complexity of the reality, and the reality of the complexities – because it is complex, isn’t it, Jason?”
Jason Fox

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