“Science is not the enemy of God, and religion is not the enemy of science. After all, when God made the world, He made science possible.” – Bruce and Stan, God Is In The Small Stuff

“Do one thing at a time. The brain is a sequential processor, unable to pay attention to two things at the same time. Businesses and schools praise multitasking, but research shows that it reduces productivity and increases mistakes.” – John Medina, Brain Rules

“Wherever your path takes you, may all your deathbed wishes come true, and may you celebrate each and every one of them many long years before your final breath.” 

― Gay Hendricks, Five Wishes: How Answering One Simple Question Can Make Your Dreams Come True

“There are two kinds of sparks, the one that goes off with a hitch, but burns out quickly. The other is the kind that needs time, but when the flame strikes…it’s eternal, don’t forget that.” – Timothy Oliveira

“We were written in the stars, my love, all that separated us, was time, the time it took to read the map which was placed within our hearts, to find our way back to one another.” – Source Unknown, Chicken Soup For The Soul, True Love

“To better understand who you really are, understand why you want what you want, getting to the emotions you seek. To go even deeper, ask yourself why you think you can’t feel those now.” – Mike Dooley, Notes From The Universe

“Whoever is happy will make others happy, too.” – Mark Twain, writer and humorist

“When you follow your bliss…doors will open where you would not have thought there would be doors; and where there wouldn’t be a door for anyone else.” – Joseph Campbell, twentieth-century scholar and professor

“Where your talents and the needs of the world cross, there lies your vocation.” These two, talents and the needs of the world, are the great wake-up calls to your true vocation in life. To ignore either is, in some sense, to lose your soul. – Laurence Boldt, Zen and the Art of Making a Living

“There are two great days in a person’s life — the day we are born and the day we discover why.” – William Barclay, twentieth-century Scottish theologian