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    female from United States
    Joined dxpnet on January 18, 2005.
    Quote Zodiac: SAGITTARIUS
    November 23 - December 21)
    November 23, 1834 James Thomson:
    Give a man a horse he can ride,
    Give a man a boat he can sail;
    And his rank and wealth, his strength and health
    On sea nor shore shall fail.

    November 24, 1888 Dale Carnegie:
    Most of the important things in the world have been accomplished by people who have kept on trying when there seemed to be no hope at all.

    November 25, 1835 Andrew Carnegie:
    Immense power is acquired by assuring yourself in your secret reveries that you were born to control affairs.

    November 26, 1922 Charles Schulz:
    My life has no purpose . . . my life has no direction . . . no aim . . . no meaning . . . and yet I'm happy . . . I can't figure it out . . . What am I doing right?

    November 27, 1937 Gail Sheehy:
    If we don't change, we don't grow. If we don't grow, we are not really living. Growth demands a temporary surrender of security.

    November 28, 1918 Madeleine L'Engle:
    I do not think that I will ever reach a stage when I will say, 'This is what I believe. Finished.' What I believe is alive...and open to growth.

    November 29, 1898 C. S. Lewis:
    Amiable agnostics will talk cheerfully about man's search for God. For me, they might as well talk about the mouse's search for a cat.

    November 30, 1835 Mark Twain:
    Of all God's creatures there is only one that cannot be made the slave of the lash. That one is the cat. If man could be crossed with a cat it would improve man, but it would deteriorate the cat.

    December 1, 1935 Woody Allen:
    How to make God laugh: Tell him your future plans.

    December 2, 1910 J. Russel Lynes:
    The true snob never rests: there is always a higher goal to attain, and there are, by the same token, always more and more people to look down upon.

    December 3, 1857 Joseph Conrad:
    All ambitions are lawful except those that climb upward on the miseries or credulities of mankind.

    December 4, 1835 Samuel Butler (II):
    The advantage of doing one's praising for oneself is that one can lay it on so thick and exactly in the right places.

    December 5, 1697 Gerhard Tersteegen:
    As long as we want to be different from what God wants us to be at the time, we are only tormenting ourselves to no purpose

    December 6, 1955 Steven Wright:
    A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.

    December 7, 1888 Joyce Cary:
    For good and evil, man is a free creative spirit. This produces the very queer world we live in, a world in continuous creation and therefore continuous change and insecurity.

    December 8, 1865 Jean Sibelius:
    I don't understand how man could live without religion.

    December 9, 1933 Asleigh Brilliant:
    Sometimes I need what only you can provide -- your absence.

    December 10, 1554 Sir Philip Sidney:
    Either I will find a way, or I will make one.

    December 11, 1918 Alexandr Solzenitshyn:
    Own only what you can always carry with you: know languages, know countries, know people. Let your memory be your travel bag.

    December 12, 1924 Ed Koch:
    I'm not the type to get ulcers. I give them.

    December 13, 1835 Phillips Brooks:
    The best advisors . . . give us, out of themselves, the ardent spirit and desire to act right, and leave us then, even through many blunders, to find out what our own form of right action is.

    December 14, 1883 Morihei Ueshiba:
    Ultimately, you must forget about technique. The further you progress, the fewer teachings there are. The Great Path is really No Path.

    December 15, 1949 Don Johnson: