Quotes
Authors
Rahul Dravid
"I was like every other boy in India, with a dream of playing for my country. Yet I could never have imagined a journey so long and so fulfilling. No dream is ever chased alone." --
Source : "Have Failed at Times, but Never Stopped Trying: Rahul Dravid". archive.indianexpress.com. March 10, 2012.
Rahul Dravid
#Dream Quotes
#Country Quotes
#Boys Quotes
“The sin of Kibr (arrogance) is actually worse than many of the sins that we would be advising [other] people about.”
“I always loved the way music made me feel. I did sports at school and all, but when I got home, it was just music. Everybody in my neighborhood loved music. I could jump the back fence and be in the park where there were ghetto blasters everywhere.”
“The planet should not be used as a warehouse of resources to serve humanity's selfishness”
“It wasn't my first kiss, maybe it wasn't my best kiss, but it was pretty fine, and the fact that he had asked will forever make that kiss stand out in my mind, touch my heart, make me remember a kiss so tender it made me cry.”
“I loved curling and I loved the social aspect of it, the team. It's like if you had the same golf foursome for a long time, or if you're a bridge player, or a beer-league hockey team. You start to look forward to that time together and camaraderie, and having something that you do just for yourself.”
Source : Source: www.macleans.ca
“On a very rough-and-ready basis we might define an eccentric as a man who is a law unto himself, and a crank as one who, having determined what the law is, insists on laying it down to others. An eccentric puts ice cream on steak simply because he likes it; should a crank do so, he would endow the act with moral grandeur and straightaway denounce as sinners (or reactionaries) all who failed to follow suit.... Cranks, at their most familiar, are a sort of peevish prophets, and it's not enough that they should be in the right; others must also be in the wrong.”
Source : "Company Manners: A Cultural Inquiry into American Life". Book by Louis Kronenberger, 1954.
“You just stroke me, stroke me.”
Source : Song: The Stroke
“When we see beyond self, we no longer cling to happiness. And when we stop clinging, we can begin to be happy.”