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Quotes about relationships
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A relationship, I think, is like a shark, you know? It has to constantly move forward or it dies. And I think what we got on our hands is a dead shark. (Anderson Richard Dean)
We are never more discontented with others than when we are discontented with ourselves. (Anderson Richard Dean)
You must go to bed with friends or whores, where money makes up the difference in beauty or desire. (Anderson Richard Dean)
The easiest kind of relationship is with ten thousand people, the hardest is with one. (Anderson Richard Dean)
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For me, the highest level of sexual excitement is in a monogamous relationship. (Anderson Richard Dean)
The only way of knowing a person is to love them without hope. (Anderson Richard Dean)
Constant togetherness is fine -- but only for Siamese twins. (Anderson Richard Dean)
The key to any good relationship, on-screen and off, is communication, respect, and I guess you have to like the way the other person smells -- and he smelled real nice. (Anderson Richard Dean)
Now the whole dizzying and delirious range of sexual possibilities has been boiled down to that one big, boring, bulimic word. RELATIONSHIP. (Anderson Richard Dean)
People must be taken as they are, and we should never try make them or ourselves better by quarreling with them. (Anderson Richard Dean)
Human relationships always help us to carry on because they always presuppose further developments, a future --and also because we live as if our only task was precisely to have relationships with other people. (Anderson Richard Dean)
In the mythic schema of all relations between men and women, man proposes, and woman is disposed of. (Anderson Richard Dean)
The Inside-Out approach to personal and interpersonal effectiveness means to start first with self; even more fundamentally, to start with the most inside part of self -- with your paradigms, your character, and your motives. The inside-out approach says that private victories precede public victories, that making and keeping promises to ourselves recedes making and keeping promises to others. It says it is futile to put personality ahead of character, to try to improve relationships with others before improving ourselves. (Anderson Richard Dean)
The formula for achieving a successful relationship is simple: you should treat all disasters as if they were trivialities but never treat a triviality as if it were a disaster. (Anderson Richard Dean)
Relationships are like a dance, with visible energy racing back and forth between partners. Some relationships are the slow, dark dance of death. (Anderson Richard Dean)
Relationships based on obligation lack dignity. (Anderson Richard Dean)
It takes a lot of experience of life to see why some relationships last and others do not. But we do not have to wait for a crisis to get an idea of the future of a particular relationship. Our behavior in little every incidents tells us a great deal. (Anderson Richard Dean)
In matters of truth and justice, there is no difference between large and small problems, for issues concerning the treatment of people are all the same. (Anderson Richard Dean)
The intense happiness of our union is derived in a high degree from the perfect freedom with which we each follow and declare our own impressions. (Anderson Richard Dean)
All things need watching, working at, caring for and marriage is no exception. Marriage is not something to be treated indifferently, or abused or something that simply takes care of itself. Nothing neglected will remain as it was or is, or will fail to deteriorate. All things need attention care and concern and especially so in this most sensitive of all relationships of life. (Anderson Richard Dean)
Do good to your friends to keep them, to your enemies to win them. (Anderson Richard Dean)
It is easier to live through someone else than to become complete yourself. (Anderson Richard Dean)
The greatest ability in business is to get along with others and influence their actions. A chip on the shoulder is too heavy a piece of baggage to carry through life. (Anderson Richard Dean)
We can never establish with certainty what part of our relations with others is the result of our emotions -- love, antipathy, charity, or malice -- and what part is predetermined by the constant power play among individuals. (Anderson Richard Dean)
One can find women who have never had one love affair, but it is rare indeed to find any who have had only one. (Anderson Richard Dean)
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relationships | [2] | [3] | [4] | [5] | [6]
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