adapting
Adapt to your surrounding but remain flexible for growing.
— Ashley Porter
I have every expectation that cancer will become known as the disease of human evolution trying and failing to adapt to a significantly changed environment.
— Steven Magee
I look at the world and I see absurdity all around me. People do strange things constantly, to the point that, for the most part, we manage not to see it.
— David Lynch
I'm always amazed at the human capacity to not make fundamental changes, but instead merely adapt. I see these pictures of people in Beijing and New Delhi, walking around with masks on, because you can't walk outside your house and breathe? If you can't breathe?… If that's not the cue to make a fundamental change, I don't know what is!
— Bill Maher
It's still ok to dream with a broken heart.
— Nikki Rowe
Look around you. Everything changes. Everything on this earth is in a continuous state of evolving, refining, improving, adapting, enhancing…changing. You were not put on this earth to remain stagnant.
— Steve Maraboli
No matter what happens in your life, keep an open heart and mind with a gentle smile. It's the true beauty of the heart.
— Imania Margria
Nothing that remains static is truly ever alive. Nature does not abide idleness. All energy sources of the natural world and the cosmos are in a constant motion, they are in a perpetual state of fluctuation. All forms of living must make allowances for the seasons of change. The Earth itself is twirling through space, spinning on its axis analogous to a child’s top. The unpredictable forces of instability brought about by a combination of motion, change, and flux propels the miraculous dynamism of existence.
— Kilroy J. Oldster
The first time someone I loved left me behind... I didn't know how my family would balance. We had been such a sturdy little end table, four solid legs. I was sure we would now be off-kilter, always unstable. Until one day I looked more closely, and realized that we had simply become a stool.
— Jodi Picoult
The work of art always requires us to adapt to it—and in this manner can be distinguished from escapism or shallow entertainment, which instead aims to adapt to the audience, to give the public exactly what it wants. We can tell that we are encountering a real work of art by the degree to which it resists subjectivity.
— Ted Gioia
© Spoligo | 2024 All rights reserved