Learn Quotes
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My friend...care for your psyche...know thyself, for once we know ourselves, we may learn how to care for ourselves.
Socrates
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I have a rule now that I can only watch a movie twice. By the third time I was watching 'The Guest,' I was hating everything about it, but the first time, I loved it. The first time you watch it, you watch it as a whole. And the second time, I think you can learn a lot. By the third time, you are just picking everything apart.
Maika Monroe
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To give pleasure to the old man, I clumsily tried to learn, and I was dreadfully bad.
Astor Piazzolla
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Learn from my mistakes and you don't have to make them yourself.
Vanilla Ice
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I've noticed that the more I open up, the more I learn.
Abigail Washburn
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All things are filled full of signs, and it is a wise man who can learn about one thing from another.
Plotinus
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The goal for me has always been to learn how to express myself in radio and to have fun doing it and work with whatever contingencies arise.
Michael Feldman
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It is a tremendous freedom to get rid of all self-considerat ion and learn to care about only one thing-the relationship between Christ and ourselves.
Oswald Chambers
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And what is called history at school, and all we learn by heart there about heroes and geniuses and great deeds and fine emotions, is all nothing but a swindle invented by the schoolmasters for educational reasons to keep children occupied for a given number of years. It has always been so and always will be.
Hermann Hesse
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It is ironic that many Filipinos learn to love the Philippines while abroad, not at home.
Ambeth R. Ocampo
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Some actors learn the habit of promoting themselves as a brand - by dressing in a certain way, by going out with a certain person - it gives them what they obviously want, which is to keep a level of fame. I'm not putting it down.
Viggo Mortensen
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You can live a lifetime and, at the end of it, know more about other people than you know about yourself. You learn to watch other people, but you never watch yourself because you strive against loneliness. If you read a book, or shuffle a deck of cards, or care for a dog, you are avoiding yourself. The abhorrence of loneliness is as natural as wanting to live at all. If it were otherwise, men would never have bothered to make an alphabet, nor to have fashioned words out of what were only animal sounds, nor to have crossed continents - each man to see what the other looked like.
Beryl Markham