a crumbling road

Celestine 2022-09-11 22:05:25

Frankenstein Music: Debbi Koh-Frankenstein

There are many golden sentences, selling warmth, and good people are rewarded. But not everyone, there is a saying that good people do not live long, very sad.

Every time a person changes, it has an infinite impact on the future of life. If you realize something, then you will have more feelings and give up some income accordingly. An attitude between trade-offs - there is something to be desired.

Spiritual life is empty and deficient, but in the infinite expansion of desire and demand, it is found that nothing is obtained.

You must be happy in life, but you must also plan ahead. You're bound to be disappointed at times, without exception. Life has its ups and downs, and over time, the whole world rolls over you, and you take on the color of what you've experienced. The so-called charisma, I think, is all the things you have experienced. Studying, reading, suffering, setbacks and big and small noises are summed up as your life experience, and the temperament produced is naturally attracted to others. You will like a person who is witty and humorous, who speaks gracefully at many times, and who makes people trustworthy, and you will be willing to work under him. On the other hand, the small-bellied chicken intestines are always full of complaints and do not work hard. Such people may have friends, but whether those friends really help him when he encounters difficulties needs to be questioned.

The influence of human feelings also has the ability to broadcast. When you become the first one to step on the unspoiled grass, you should think that one day you want to see the whole piece of green, and an untimely burst will appear. 's path.

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Extended Reading

A Defintely Maybe quotes

  • Lou Wheeler: All families got problems but you only got one.

  • [first lines]

    Dane Jensen: [narrating] I am a headhunter and I am the purest form of salesman alive. I sell the American dream. I make money out of thin air, smoke, whole cloth. I stand on the shoulders of giants, the hardest of hardened salesmen. Tin men, Bible salesmen, slum realtors. We're a wolf pack of commissioned phone jockeys working 70 hours a week without a net. You hit, you hit big. You blank, and the repo man's tailgating the minivan at the grocery store. This job is a desk, a phone, a chair, and your ass.