Life & Aging Sayings

124 sayings found from the Modern era from 124 authors

Efforts and courage are not enough without purpose and direction.

— John F. Kennedy 1962
Life & Aging

You know, it's easy to be a Monday morning quarterback. It's a lot harder to be a Saturday afternoon quarterback.

— Harry Truman 1950s
Life & Aging

The American way of life is not a static thing. It is a dynamic thing.

— Dwight Eisenhower 1950s
Life & Aging

We were not born to a life of ease but to struggle.

— Benito Mussolini 1920s
Life & Aging

The new people are rotten. The old people are good.

— Pol Pot 1975
Life & Aging

The State of Israel is the fulfillment of a two-thousand-year-old dream.

— David Ben-Gurion 1948
Life & Aging

We refuse to be a pawn in the Cold War.

— Patrice Lumumba 1960
Life & Aging

Life is a continuous struggle.

— Indira Gandhi Unknown
Life & Aging

My life is dedicated to my country.

— Garibaldi 1860s
Life & Aging

The world historical individuals are the ones who have grasped the next necessary stage in the development of the Spirit.

— Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 1837 (posthumous)
Life & Aging

The present age is an age of dissolution, an age of disintegration, an age of destruction.

— Soren Kierkegaard 1846
Life & Aging

What is life but a series of inspired follies?

— Jean-Paul Sartre Unknown
Life & Aging

The only way to escape the absurdity of life is to live it to the full.

— Hannah Arendt Unknown
Life & Aging

I perceive that, when an old garment is taken off, the new is not yet put on.

— Henry David Thoreau 1854
Life & Aging

The first requisite of all history is the production of the means to satisfy these needs, the production of material life itself.

— Friedrich Engels 1845-46 (published posthumously)
Life & Aging

The aim of all life is to find pleasure and avoid pain.

— Sigmund Freud 1920
Life & Aging

Life calls us to change, and it is a painful process.

— Carl Jung Unknown
Life & Aging

Only through communication can human life hold meaning.

— Paulo Freire 1968
Life & Aging

War is so unjust and ugly that all who wage it must try to stifle the voice of conscience within themselves.

— Leo Tolstoy 1869
Life & Aging

The more I live, the more I become convinced that the only true happiness in life is to live for others.

— Fyodor Dostoevsky Mid-Late 19th Century
Life & Aging
Your Cart

Your cart is empty