« All Tomorrow Quotes · Gautama Buddha's Page
Tomorrow Quotes by Gautama Buddha
- Do not pursue the past. Do not lose yourself in the future. The past no longer is. The future has not yet come. Looking deeply…
- Love yourself and be awake- Today, tomorrow, always. First establish yourself in the way, Then teach others, And so defeat sorrow. To straighten the crooked…
- We must be diligent today. To wait until tomorrow is too late. Death comes unexpectedly. How can we bargain with it?
- What we are today comes from our thoughts of yesterday, and our present thoughts build our life of tomorrow: our life is the creation of…
- Love yourself and watch - Today, tomorrow, always. To straighten the crooked You must first do a harder thing - Straighten yourself.
More Tomorrow Quotes
- As far as we are concerned, we are ready to leave today, tomorrow, at any time, to join the people of Haiti,… — Jean-Bertrand Aristide
- Tomorrow is nothing, today is too late; the good lived yesterday. — Marcus Aurelius
- I am my heart's undertaker. Daily I go and retrieve its tattered remains, place them delicately into its little coffin, and bury… — Emilie Autumn
- I don't think acting is addictive. If I stopped acting tomorrow, I really wouldn't care. If you told me that I would… — Alec Baldwin
- The stories that I want to tell, especially as a director, don't necessarily have a perfect ending because, the older you get,… — Drew Barrymore
- Gratitude makes sense of our past, brings peace for today, and creates a vision for tomorrow. — Melody Beattie
- Today's smartest advertising style is tomorrow's corn. — William Bernbach
- Every tomorrow has two handles. We can take hold of it with the handle of anxiety or the handle of faith. — Henry Ward Beecher
- We steal if we touch tomorrow. It is God's. — Henry Ward Beecher
- We shall never have more time. We have, and always had, all the time there is. No object is served in waiting… — Arnold Bennett
- The man for whom time stretches out painfully is one waiting in vain, disappointed at not finding tomorrow already continuing yesterday. — Theodor Adorno
- The Arabs could have peace tomorrow if sufficient numbers of Palestinians were not content to be used as cannon fodder in fruitless… — Conrad Black