Goal achievement is hero’s work.
BILL VAUGHANKids are not driving themselves to McDonalds. It’s not about kids and their choices. It’s about parents and their choices.
More Bill Vaughan Quotes
-
-
He knows not the value of a day of pleasure who has not seen adversity.
BILL VAUGHAN -
O hour, of all hours, the most blesse’d upon earth, The bless’d hour of our dinners!
BILL VAUGHAN -
The Universe knows itself and expands itself through me.
BILL VAUGHAN -
Out of suffering have emerged the strongest souls; the most massive characters are seamed with scars; martyrs have put on their coronation robes glittering with fire, and through their tears have the sorrowful first seen the gates of Heaven.
BILL VAUGHAN -
It is not easy to describe the present position of legal opinion on advertising and free speech. Only a poet can capture the essence of chaos.
BILL VAUGHAN -
A decision of the courts decided that the game of golf may be played on a Sunday, not being a game within the view of the law, but being a form of moral effort.
BILL VAUGHAN -
Meditating means bringing the mind back to something again and again. Thus, we all meditate, but unless we direct it in some way, we meditate on ourselves and on our own problems, reinforcing our self-clinging.
BILL VAUGHAN -
The most malignant of enemies is the lust which abides within.
BILL VAUGHAN -
The eagle may soar; beavers build dams.
BILL VAUGHAN -
On the neck of a giraffe a flea begins to believe in immortality.
BILL VAUGHAN -
I count this thing to be grandly true: That a noble deed is a step toward God.
BILL VAUGHAN -
The true antidote to greed is contentment. If you have a strong sense of contentment, it doesn’t matter whether you obtain the object of your desire or not. Either way, you are still content.
BILL VAUGHAN -
Man is the animal that intends to shoot himself out into interplanetary space, after having given up on the problem of an efficient way to get himself five miles to work and back each day.
BILL VAUGHAN -
Muscles come and go; flab lasts.
BILL VAUGHAN -
Journalism, like history, has no therapeutic value; it is better able to diagnose than to cure, and it provides society with a primitive means of psychoanalysis that allows the patient to judge the distance between fantasy and reality.
BILL VAUGHAN