V.C. Andrews Quote
Related Quotes
It is not a person or situation that affects your life; it is the meaning you give to that person or situation, which influences your emotions and actions. Your choice is to change the meaning you gav...
Shannon L. Alder
Tags:
affect, agressive, bad perception, bad situations, change, come, competition, don t fight, don t pursue, dreams
SENSES, APPEARANCE and ESSENCEThe world we see through our senses are very different than the world we see through our essence. Senses perceive the world of appearance. The first step of perceiving th...
Petek Kabakci
Tags:
appearance, essence, essenceofthings, existence, fivesenses, goals, intuition, mind, perception, seeing
Sitting to think of what to write will only set your ass on fire, give you headache, twist your face to look stupid, instead, walk around with a blank mind and something from somewhere will fill it up...
Michael Bassey Johnson
Tags:
arson, ass, blank, boredom, brain, clever, contemplation, creative thoughts, creativity, ennui
The New Man means to develop all the three dimensions of being, all the three doors to God: the head, the dimension of thinking, logic and reason, the heart - the dimension of joy, trust, intuition, r...
Swami Dhyan Giten
Tags:
acceptance, awareness, being, brain, consciousenss, consciousness, emptiness, existence, friendship, head
I pray for sufficient wisdom to understand that wisdom apart from God is the stuff of opinion tainted by the rot of bias. And if I am somehow apt to confuse such rubbish with wisdom, I will think myse...
Craig D. Lounsbrough
Tags:
bias, christian, christianity, deceived, discerning, distorted, distortion, god, intuition, intuitive
About V.C. Andrews
Cleo Virginia Andrews (June 6, 1923 – December 19, 1986), better known as V. C. Andrews or Virginia C. Andrews, was an American novelist. She was best known for her 1979 novel Flowers in the Attic, which inspired two movie adaptations and four sequels. While her novels are not classified by her publisher as Young Adult, their young protagonists have made them popular among teenagers for decades. After her death in 1986, a ghostwriter who was initially hired to complete two unfinished works has continued to publish books under her name.