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Might Quotes Quotes

Quotes tagged as "might-quotes" Showing 1-22 of 22
Kangoma Kindembo
“The best way to get your enemy to work for you as a friend is - to create an environment where it is difficult to define the nature of friendship or enmity easily.”
Kangoma Kindembo

Sabina Nore
“No story should ever be considered as final, nor a rigid telling, but as a prompt to either investigate or meditate upon it. In other words, the story, provided it has at least some discernible depth, ought to be a medium, a prompt to one’s higher self to look beyond the naked narrative. Throughout the ages, until recently, the words story and history were interchangeable in meaning. Storial is now an obsolete word, but if something was, what you would call, historically accurate, then it was storial — not historical.

Stories and histories entangle. Stories can disentangle, and liberate.

This is one of the keys to conscious presence. One of the keys to lucidity.

Stories have that potential, they carry that power within them. Whether they are used to entangle, entertain, or disentangle, depends on the intent and the wisdom of the storyteller. This is an essential truth, valid for any story that has ever been told.
In choosing to let go of the stories which have entangled you into a lilliputian presence, you make room for the story which can not only dis-entangle, but expand your capacity as an individual, and bring you into the presence of ultimate realization. That is the might of the story.

Remember this. As you would take a key and place it in your pocket, take this information, fully aware and conscious of taking it, and save it.”
Sabina Nore, Weird Genius: The Story of Your Ankh

“Knowledge is true strength, understanding is true might, and wisdom is true power.”
Matshona Dhliwayo

“Knowledge is true strength. Understanding is true might. Wisdom is true power.”
Matshona Dhliwayo

Bangambiki Habyarimana
“It’s a war of visions and dreams, none of which is substantiated, in the end only the ones best published and adhered to by the most powerful will be known as the supreme truth, the rest will be trampled underfoot.”
Bangambiki Habyarimana, Book of Wisdom

“Patience is the gardener's virtue; in time, even the smallest seed becomes the mightiest oak.”
Aloo Denish Obiero

“A lion's strength does not lie in its roar.”
Matshona Dhliwayo

“Joy doubles your faith, strength triples your might, and love quadruples your power.”
Matshona Dhliwayo

“I am generous because I've been poor,
cautious because I've been naive,
strong because I've been afraid,
clever because I've been foolish,
and mighty because I've been weak.”
Matshona Dhliwayo

“The weak buy their way to the top, the mighty persevere to it.”
Matshona Dhliwayo

P.S. Jagadeesh Kumar
“The mighty might give up, hitherto, the almighty might give up”
P.S. Jagadeesh Kumar

Sabina Nore
“No story should ever be considered as final, nor a rigid telling, but as a prompt to either investigate or meditate upon it. In other words, the story, provided it has at least some discernible depth, ought to be a medium, a prompt to one’s higher self to look beyond the naked narrative. Throughout the ages, until recently, the words story and history were interchangeable in meaning. Storial is now an obsolete word, but if something was, what you would call, historically accurate, then it was storial — not historical.

Stories and histories entangle. Stories can disentangle, and liberate.

This is one of the keys to conscious presence. One of the keys to lucidity.

Stories have that potential, they carry that power within them. Whether they are used to entangle, entertain, or disentangle, depends on the intent and the wisdom of the storyteller. This is an essential truth, valid for any story that has ever been told.
In choosing to let go of the stories which have entangled you into a lilliputian presence, you make room for the story which can not only dis-entangle, but expand your capacity as an individual, and bring you into the presence of ultimate realization. That is the might of the story.

Remember this. As you would take a key and place it in your pocket, take this information, fully aware and conscious of taking it, and save it.”
Sabina Nore, Weird Genius: The Story of Your Ankh