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    “In business, people negotiate to win. They negotiate to get what they want. Maybe you’re too used to that. Love is different. Love is when you are as concerned about someone else’s situation as you are about your own.”

    Morrie Schwartz, via Tuesdays With Morrie (Page 178)

      “Never assume that the person you are dealing with is weaker or less important than you are. A man who is of little importance and means today can be a person of power tomorrow. We forget a lot in our lives, but we rarely forget an insult.”

      Robert Greene, The Daily Laws (Page 163)

        “As long as we can love each other, and remember the feeling of love we had, we can die without ever really going away. All the love you created is still there. All the memories are still there. You live on—in the hearts of everyone you have touched and nurtured while you were here.”

        Morrie Schwartz, via Tuesdays With Morrie (Page 174)

          ‘That’s what we’re all looking for. A certain peace with the idea of dying. If we know, in the end, that we can ultimately have that peace with dying, then we can finally do the really hard thing.’ Which is? ‘Make peace with living.’

          Morrie Schwartz, via Tuesdays With Morrie (Page 173)

            “If you would like to know how to recognize a prophet, look to him who gives you the knowledge of your own heart.”

            Persian Wisdom, via A Calendar of Wisdom (Page 136)

              “You need to train yourself to pay less attention to the words that people say and greater attention to their actions. People will say all kinds of things about their motives and intentions; they are used to dressing things up with words. Their actions, however, say much more about what is going on underneath the surface.”

              Robert Greene, The Daily Laws (Page 161)

                “The problem, Mitch, is that we don’t believe we are as much alike as we are. Whites and blacks, Catholics and Protestants, men and women. If we saw each other as more alike, we might be very eager to join in one big human family in this world, and to care about that family the way we care about our own. But, believe me, when you are dying, you see it is true. We all have the same beginning—birth—and we all have the same end—death. So how different can we be? Invest in the human family. Invest in people. Build a little community of those you love and who love you.”

                Morrie Schwartz, via Tuesdays With Morrie (Page 157)

                  “Look, no matter where you live, the biggest defect we human beings have is our shortsightedness. We don’t see what we could be. We should be looking at our potential, stretching ourselves into everything we can become. But if you’re surrounded by people who say ‘I want mine now,’ you end up with a few people with everything and a military to keep the poor ones from rising up and stealing it.”

                  Morrie Schwartz, via Tuesdays With Morrie (Page 156)

                    “What the smartest people do on the weekend is what everyone else will do during the week in ten years.”

                    Chris Dixon