comment by NY Times reader (Douglas K) on Wall Street Graduates Wait, Watch and Worry (via soupsoup)
I think that might be my new motto.
(via kayfabe)
Seriously?! Bernie Mac, Isaac Hayes and now Morgan Freeman.. what the hells going on?!
You guys, Morgan Freeman isn’t dead.
I fell for that one hook, line and sinker.
(via kayfabe)
Seriously?! Bernie Mac, Isaac Hayes and now Morgan Freeman.. what the hells going on?!
I couldn’t put it better than noraleah did.
Why do some people sail through life easily and without hardship while others have to work so very hard?Are you asking why some people suffer more? Why some are born in abject poverty? Why some must face war and hatred? That is, indeed, eternally inexplicable.
But I think you are getting at something else….
It is a question of how much you want out of life. If you want to achieve more than the average or even above-average person, you will “have to work so very hard.” And there will certainly be more setbacks along the way. They will slow down and eventually stop the others — because of lack of ambition, lack of imagination, lack of energy, or, ultimately, lack of interest — but they won’t stop you.
I have never read a biography of or an interview with a very successful writer, politician, artist, or business person that says anything different. To bastardize a phrase: no one ever said on their deathbed, “I wish I spent less time working for my dreams.”
I want to live an extraordinary life, so I must put in extraordinary effort.
Miss-r, ditto.
(via breefield)
After watching that… yes. If he becomes president, I’m moving to Canada.
“Often times, white people get frustrated with the state of their country. They do not like the President, or Congress, or the health care system, or the illegal status of Marijuana. Whenever they are presented with a situation that seems unreasonable to them, their first instinct is to threaten to move to Canada.” - Stuff White People Like
(btw, i’m hoping you’re white so i don’t look like a complete asshole.)
An unidentified crying Georgian woman is calmed by her husband after finding out that her child was killed in a neighboring village, in Gori, about 80 km (50 miles) from Tbilisi, August 11, 2008. (REUTERS/Gleb Garanich)
More photos of the War in South Ossetia here.