Eleanore Sroczynski > Eleanore's Quotes

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  • #1
    “Once you can clarify your unique vision for the end goal—comfort, happiness, security, etc.— you can get started on the path toward the reality of success.”
    Curtis L. Jenkins, Vision to Reality: Stop Working, Start Living

  • #1
    “you must get the right talent and set the proper expectations. If you don’t, you will pay for the job twice—through your employees’ time and your own.”
    Curtis L. Jenkins, Vision to Reality: Stop Working, Start Living

  • #2
    “I want to see a world in which entrepreneurs give time to their visions to reality so that they have more money, more family time, and more support, a world in which they can stop working so hard and start living!”
    Curtis L. Jenkins, Vision to Reality: Stop Working, Start Living

  • #3
    “Entrepreneurs never get to the realization of their vision by doing what got them to the point they are currently at.”
    Curtis L. Jenkins, Vision to Reality: Stop Working, Start Living

  • #4
    “Communication is how entrepreneurs tell their story, which, in turn, should inspire employees to work smart and encourage customers to action.”
    Curtis L. Jenkins, Vision to Reality: Stop Working, Start Living

  • #5
    “Every entrepreneur should spend time with all their employees, individually and collectively. It is the only way to understand what they want, what is in it for them, what they are hoping to achieve, and what they aspire to become.”
    Curtis L. Jenkins, Vision to Reality: Stop Working, Start Living

  • #6
    “Business leaders make one of two mistakes: overestimating or underestimating their capabilities.”
    Curtis L. Jenkins, Vision to Reality: Stop Working, Start Living

  • #7
    “Succeeding in business is no easy task, but my approach, backed by many years of experience, can help each unique entrepreneur—including you—clear the fog and take the next logical steps forward toward the realization of their dreams.”
    Curtis L. Jenkins, Vision to Reality: Stop Working, Start Living

  • #8
    “Entrepreneurs aren’t looking to go backward. They are looking to go forward, toward their prize of realizing their dreams.”
    Curtis L. Jenkins, Vision to Reality: Stop Working, Start Living

  • #9
    Clay Shirky
    “When we change the way we communicate, we change society”
    Clay Shirky, Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations

  • #10
    Clay Shirky
    “Communications tools don't get socially interesting until they get technologically boring.”
    Clay Shirky, Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations

  • #11
    Clay Shirky
    “We have lived in this world where little things are done for love and big things for money. Now we have Wikipedia. Suddenly big things can be done for love.”
    Clay Shirky

  • #12
    Clay Shirky
    “The more people are involved in a given task, the more potential agreements need to be negotiated to do anything, and the greater the transaction costs.”
    Clay Shirky, Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations

  • #13
    Clay Shirky
    “Institutions will try to preserve the problem to which they are the solution.”
    Clay Shirky

  • #14
    Clay Shirky
    “The future presented by the internet is the mass amateurization of publishing and a switch from 'Why publish this?' to 'Why not?”
    Clay Shirky, Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations
    tags: media

  • #15
    Clay Shirky
    “Fame is simply an imbalance between inbound and outbound attention.”
    Clay Shirky, Here Comes Everybody: The Power of Organizing Without Organizations

  • #16
    Tana French
    “I had learned early to assume something dark and lethal hidden at the heart of anything I loved. When I couldn't find it, I responded, bewildered and wary, in the only way I knew how: by planting it there myself.”
    Tana French, In the Woods

  • #17
    Tana French
    “I am not good at noticing when I'm happy, except in retrospect.”
    Tana French, In the Woods

  • #18
    Tana French
    “I've always loved strong women, which is lucky for me because once you're over about twenty-five there is no other kind. Women blow my mind. The stuff that routinely gets done to them would make most men curl up and die, but women turn to steel and keep on coming. Any man who claims he's not into strong women is fooling himself mindless; he's into strong women who know how to pout prettily and put on baby voices, and who will end up keeping his balls in her makeup bags.”
    Tana French, Faithful Place

  • #19
    Tana French
    “My father told me once that the most important thing every man should know is what he would die for.”
    Tana French, Faithful Place

  • #20
    Tana French
    “I wanted to tell her that being loved is a talent too, that it takes as much guts and as much work as loving; that some people, for whatever reason, never learn the knack ”
    Tana French, The Likeness

  • #21
    Tana French
    “I read a lot. I always have, but in those two years I gorged myself on books with a voluptuous, almost erotic gluttony. I would go to the local library and take out as many as I could, and then lock myself in the bedsit and read solidly for a week. I went for old books, the older the better--Tolstoy, Poe, Jacobean tragedies, a dusty translation of Laclos--so that when I finally resurfaced, blinking and dazzled, it took me days to stop thinking in their cool, polished, crystalline rhythms.”
    Tana French, In the Woods

  • #22
    Tana French
    “Regardless of the advertising campaigns may tell us, we can't have it all. Sacrifice is not an option, or an anachronism; it's a fact of life. We all cut off our own limbs to burn on some altar. The crucial thing is to choose an altar that's worth it and a limb you can accept losing. To go consenting to the sacrifice.”
    Tana French, The Likeness

  • #23
    Tana French
    “Over time, the ghosts of things that happened start to turn distant; once they've cut you a couple of million times, their edges blunt on your scar tissue, they wear thin. The ones that slice like razors forever are the ghosts of things that never got the chance to happen.”
    Tana French, Broken Harbour

  • #24
    Lee Matthew Goldberg
    “I watched him spread out his arms with a smile before he crashed through the table in a beautiful crescendo, the glass sounding like tinkles from a piano as its shavings glittered across the floor and sliced through his face and body.”
    Lee Matthew Goldberg, Slow Down

  • #25
    Lee Matthew Goldberg
    “I wanted solitude, but a treasure like that didn't exist in the city. I only found silence in Central Park, still littered with people of course, but the only place that held moments of calm. I breathed in that wonderful silence as my pace finally slowed, and nature delighted my senses.”
    Lee Matthew Goldberg, Slow Down

  • #26
    Lee Matthew Goldberg
    “The music grew louder, faster, as we saw an empty couch on the balcony and ran to get it, pushed aside another couple darting for the same thing, but it was ours, and we smiled wide, laughing at our fortune, our couch.”
    Lee Matthew Goldberg, Slow Down

  • #27
    Lee Matthew Goldberg
    “The heater spits a chorus of steam, his bones no longer brittle and cold. The ice man melted, a new form waiting to emerge once all the crystals get shaken away.”
    Lee Matthew Goldberg, The Ancestor

  • #28
    Lee Matthew Goldberg
    “There should be multiple yous," Grayson says, outlined by the moonlight, a blue phantasm. "So you can help solve all of our problems. So you can help solve the world's problems.”
    Lee Matthew Goldberg, The Ancestor

  • #29
    Lee Matthew Goldberg
    “The two stalkers who had finally found one another. Watching each other all night until we collapsed from exhaustion.”
    Lee Matthew Goldberg, Stalker Stalked



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