I never could be good when I was not happy.
At restaurants, I carry paper and markers and tell everyone to draw a picture with a unicorn, an octopus and an explosion. That keeps kids still for a minute.
I think it's pretty common for people to get excited when they meet somebody that they know from the media.
I frequently do drive carpool in the clothes I slept in, because it's impossible to get three children out the door with lunches packed and all that stuff and have a do.
I live alone with my one dog and they say it like it's a sad, it's a terrible thing. This woman lives alone with her two cats.
I suffer the terrible disease of low self-esteem.
There's an expression: Great is the enemy of the good. Sometimes in trying to be great, you make a mess of things.
I think it's so important that the church displays what it can look like to be "one. " Our society can be so fragmented, and there's an opportunity for the worshipping church to give some leadership into that area.
We can choose to humble ourselves by receiving counsel and chastisement,. . . by forgiving those who have offended us,. . . by rendering selfless service. . . .
Hackman's paradox: Groups have natural advantages: they have more resources than individuals; greater diversity of resources; more flexibility in deploying the resources; many opportunities for collective learning; and, the potential for synergy. Yet studies show that their actual performance often is subpar relative to "nominal" groups (i. e. individuals given the same task but their results are pooled. ) The two most common reasons: groups are assigned work that is better done by individuals or are structured in ways that cap their full potential.
A calm despair, without angry convulsions or reproaches directed at heaven, is the essence of wisdom.