I personally have always found the Unitarian faith a source of comfort and help in my daily life.
Amidst the confusion of the times the conflicts of conscience and the turmoil of daily living an abiding faith becomes an anchor to our lives.
I feel that between my experience and my mother's breast cancer is a little bit like someone who lives next door. I know what that person looks like and what their daily habits are.
My Marine experience helped shape who I am now personally and professionally and I am grateful for that on an almost daily basis.
Life is full of change and uncertainty. We know this. We experience it on a daily basis.
In our society daily experience teaches the individual to want and need a never-ending supply of new toys and drugs.
The essence of life is finding something you really love and then making the daily experience worthwhile.
Take control of your consistent emotions and begin to consciously and deliberately reshape your daily experience of life.
Genius is the ability to renew one's emotions in daily experience.
It is only through such real-life daily struggles and challenges that a genuine sensitivity to human rights can be inculcated. This is a truth that is not limited to school education: it applies to all of us.
I adore this adventure I adore working with youth. For me it's a daily challenge working to help these youths realize their dreams.
Humanity needs dreams to be able to survive the miseries of daily existence even if only for an instant.
It was taunted as reality. It was dangled as a carrot. In terms of people's hopes and dreams to say that that is less of a reality than the daily grind they find themselves in is maybe not correct.
The Constitution remains brilliant in its overall design and sound with respect to the Bill of Rights and the separation of powers. But there are numerous archaic provisions that inhibit constructive change and adaptation. These constitutional bits affect the daily life of the republic and every citizen in it.
We were then in a dangerous helpless situation exposed daily to perils and death amongst savages and wild beasts not a white man in the country but ourselves.
Most of us harbour a significant amount of subconscious fear about death and act out of this fear in our daily lives.
It is a horrible fact that we can read in the daily paper without interrupting our breakfast numerical reckonings of death and destruction that ought to break our hearts or scare us out of our wits.
A man must be willing to die for justice. Death is an inescapable reality and men die daily but good deeds live forever.
I like to behave in an extremely normal wholesome manner for the most part in my daily life. Even if mentally I'm consumed with sick visions of violence terror sex and death.
We get into the habit of living before acquiring the habit of thinking. In that race which daily hastens us towards death the body maintains its irreparable lead.
Death is nothing but to live defeated and inglorious is to die daily.
My parents are very hard working people who did everything they could for their children. I have two brothers and they worked dog hard to give us an education and provide us with the most comfortable life possible. My dad provided for his family daily. So yes that is definitely in my DNA.
If I am to be known for anything I would like it to be for encouraging Canadians for knowing a little bit about their daily extraordinary courage. And for wanting that courage to be recognized.
Have courage for the great sorrows of life and patience for the small ones and when you have laboriously accomplished your daily task go to sleep in peace.
Some of my best friends are Venture Capitalists but let's face it a hamster with Alzheimer's could make those kind of numbers. It's great work if you can get it.