Quotes
Authors
Thrity Umrigar
"This is love-not what we say to each other but what we not say. Sometime it just one look exchange. Sometime one word. But underlining everything we say or not say, something else. Something heavy and deep, like when we in bed and looking into each other's eyes. For six years, everything between husband and me was on top, like skin. Now it hidden, like bone and muscle. [] He care for me now. He finally see me. And he like what he see." --
Thrity Umrigar
#Husband Quotes
#Eye Quotes
#Years Quotes
“I've got a bike. You can ride it if you like. It's got a basket, a bell that rings and things to make it look good. I'd give it to you if I could, but I borrowed it.”
Source : "Song: Bike (The Piper at the Gates of Dawn)". August 5, 1967.
“I tend to listen to the classical composers: Rachmaninov, Satie.”
Source : "Biography/ Personal Quotes". www.imdb.com.
“Does it seem that everything is extravagance in the world, or rather madness, when you watch the way things go? A crowd of rogues enjoy blessings they have won by sheer injustice, while more honest folks are miserable and die of hunger.”
“Recipe writers hate to write about heat. They despise it. Because there aren't proper words for communicating what should be done with it.”
“Whatever you do, make a difference. Earn the right to look back at something and say, 'I did that.'”
“We are blessed with a magnificent and miraculous world ocean on this planet. But we are also stressing it in ways that we are not even close to bringing under control.”
“This game has taken a lot of guys over the years who would have had to work in factories and gas stations and made them prominent people. I only had a high school education, and believe me, I had to cheat to get that. There isn't a college in the world that would have me and yet in this business you can walk into a room with millionaires, doctors, professional people and get more attention than they get. I don't know any other business where you can do that.”
“Dignity, high station, or great riches, are in some sort necessary to old men, in order to keep the younger at a distance, who are otherwise too apt to insult them upon the score of their age.”