#On the other hand .. while I think Camu would know HOW to make stuff w redstone... like.... he just wouldnt.....
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rooshayah · 2 years ago
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Headcanons for my favorite team to play as in PGR
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mcveriicks · 6 years ago
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have you seen [ MAVERICK ST. JAMES ] since the storm? some say they look like [ HERMAN TOMMERAAS ] but they’re [ TWENTY-TWO ]  & go by [ THE PARADOX ].  [ HE ] lived in halloway for [ THREE YEARS ] & they are originally from [ WASHINGTON, D.C. ]. before the town vanished they were studying [ PHILOSOPHY ] and lived at [ UNI BLVD ]. most people knew the [ CISMALE ] as [ +CLEVER ] but i’ve heard they can also be [ -APATHETIC ]. for some reason, they feel [ UNEASY ] about the town’s disappearance. ( riley, 20, she/her, est )
hello !!! my name is riley and i’m ????? so so extremely very much excited to get the ball rollin, down n dirty, into this rp !! i’m a sucker for angst and sadness, so … expect MUCH of that w me !! mav is a new muse of mine but i’m SUPER excited to get to dev him with all of you guys !! below the cut is a … long-ass intro post bc i have no chill !! if, per chance, you’d like to plot w me and my know-it-all, assholey but suprisingly soft child, please feel free to GIVE THIS POST A LIKE or to DM ME ( either tumblr or discord i check both, i promise i don’t bite ) !!!
tw: drugs.
* / BACKGROUND.
maverick hobbes st. james was born into a life filled to the absolute brim of expectation. his mother and father met at halloway’s law school, and both went on to become highly respectable lawyers who dealt with constitutional law in washington d.c.; they work highly demanding jobs, which often left maverick, who is an only child, alone at their impressively decorated family townhouse, staring at family photos and wondering how his definition of family had become so different to his friends’ growing up.
growing up in middle and high school, maverick assumed that getting good grades and excelling at school would make his parents proud, would get them to turn their attention to his successes –– but surprise, surprise, they didn’t. they’d pat him on the back as they headed out the door to tend to their daily schedules –– that is, if he was lucky enough to see them in the morning.
he studied. hard. trying to understand the ins and outs of what his parents did, trying to see if following in their footsteps by studying law would warrant a smile or beam of pride. it didn’t. but it still got him an acceptance to his parents’ alma mater, halloway university. he made friends quickly –– he always did. always the charismatic friend, he’s learned to rely more on his friends than his family in his life.
when maverick was a senior in high school, he finally reached an age to realize some of the shady deals his parents would make on the regular, the random bonuses his parents whispered about finally making sense to him. one case in particular had apparently caused one of his classmates’ parents to be publicly humiliated for a scandal and an incident that was apparently unrelated to their careers –– but ruined them in the process.
he felt guilt, himself, knowing that his parents could be making deals like that every day. it made him shake his head, made him cry into his pillow, made him absolutely disgusted to call people like his mother and father his own parents. he wrote so many fucking speeches that he’d recite to them once he got the chance, berating them for their practices and lack of morals in their workplace. but they never came home –– and hypocritical as he was, he still enjoyed the fruits of his parents’ work. they gave him unlimited checks with his name on them, as if it was some sort of sick version of love.
while maverick was fulfilling some of his general requirements, he fell in love with philosophy, with questioning life and ethical choices that mankind has made in the past, and would make in the future. he ended up pivoting his studies, moving from pre-law to philosophy at the end of his freshman year of his undergraduate studies.
and of course –– with this twist in the system, maverick is about to make this world his playground, living in his very own simulation of how a fresh new world reacts to infinite freedoms. he’s partially excited to see what will unfold, partially scared that things will fall to absolute shit ( ever the pessimist, maverick st. james ! ) because he has little faith that his company will collectively make the right decisions.
* / PERSONALITY.
maverick st. james is quite the paradox ( hence, the label ! ). he’s charismatic, funny, and has a witty sense of humor –– and is generally appreciated by his peers because he’s able to move conversation and discussion without making topics seem dry. and generally, he’s only like this in classes that he’s passionate about –– otherwise, you’d see him in the very back corner, doodling amongst his haphazardly written notes. what’s funny is he used to always be like this –– happy, smiley, obviously intelligent and driven. but it all sort of changed when he had this big epiphany that some people aren’t what they seem like on the outside ( re: his parents ).
he’s certainly a bit arrogant, given that he’s intelligent, innovative, and clever, and knows it –– however, even if he might not show it on the outside, he appreciates a good challenger. he thinks it keeps his wit sharp, and of course, his ego would never show it, but he does appreciate learning from people. after all, his passion in philosophy makes him certainly interested in how minds work.
at social events, you can probably see him flirting his ass off, but always having a good time, too. he’s definitely the type to sleep around, but he likes to pick at people’s brains, too. probably the most deep-ass pillow-talker halloway has ever seen. it probably borders on the line of being too romantic with flings –– the way he asks questions, but also borders on being annoying.
those who happen to get to know maverick outside of the surface-level stuff, outside the initial cockiness and flirtatious front he puts on will know that he’s actually quite thoughtful. his lonely childhood has made him extremely loyal to those who have shown him similar trust and friendship –– he would never turn his back on them. he asks probing questions, is a good listener –– perhaps because he’s interested in human decision making, but is also because he doesn’t quite know what it’s like to be loved unconditionally –– though he wants to. he’ll hold back hair and rub a friend’s back while they yak, walk his friends home, maybe throw a few punches or two –– but spicy comebacks are really more his speed.
deep down, what almost no one knows is that he’s really quite soft. he passes his curiosity off as wanting to understand people, when really it’s a mechanism for hoping someone asks him questions in return, to give him the time of day he wished his parents had given him. 
* / AESTHETICS.
coffee-stained mugs, walking with headphones in, untied shoelaces, black hoodies, a cheeky smirk, small books in his back pocket, writing in the margins, quoting old authors on a daily basis, incessant eye-rolling, pen ink stains, unmade bed, mismatched socks, floral ties, empty bottles of liquor, rose thorn pricks, old worn poetry books, polished dress shoes, calloused fingers, unlit cigarettes between teeth.
* / HEADCANONS.
funnily enough, maverick’s name means ‘independent, a noncomformist’, which is exactly the path that he has taken to stray away from his family’s expectations of practicing law, specifically constitutional law as a career. he’s like. nah. fuck that.
maverick has some form of synesthesia, which allows him to remember a lot more than the average person. he associates colors, smells, sounds, to words –– and allows him to efficiently study any subjects he doesn’t have immediate passion for.
in the privacy of his own bedroom, he sometimes writes poetry and sketches his thoughts and muses –– when he knows he’s in complete privacy. faces and features that appear in his sketchbooks are often those he’s thinking of often, those who intrigue him. he’s actually quite good a sketching, maybe not quite as good at writing poetry.
tw drugs. he more than dabbles in drug use, smoking marijuana maybe every other day, while partaking in harder drugs like cocaine and adderall and others probably once a week. he feels like he’s in control of his use, but it may start to get the best of him. end tw.
maverick is left-handed. he hates that he gets pen ink stains when he draws, writes poetry, takes notes. his left palm is probably perennially covered with ink.
though he’s often wearing headphones ( airpods, of course, the nerve of this rich kid ), half the time, nothing’s playing. sometimes he forgets to press play on his phone, sometimes he purposely likes listening to decision-making and conversations of strangers. it lets him think about the nature of mankind.
maverick’s favorite philosopher is albert camus, known for his work that heavily developed the idea of absurdism ( much to do with the meaning of life, and human inability to discern an answer ). 
* / WANTED PLOTS. 
CHECK OUT MY WANTED PLOTS PAGE HERE !
childhood friends: again, someone who would have known him from pre-cynical, arrogant asshole days. they could be friends now still, 
ex-friends: perhaps maverick went a bit too far with the questions, about trying to probe into someone’s mind. maybe for this reason, or for others, these two fell out of touch / argued and might be forced into new places due to the disappearance of the other townspeople.
unlikely friends: maverick’s reputation isn’t exactly favorable to some crowds. maybe they became friends in one of their shared classes or through mutual friends, and actually get along well, despite coming from different backgrounds / having different values. they probably see a bit of a deeper side to mav than most people !!
good influence (?!): maverick gets into his shit, has probably a less-than-favorable reputation, but he still cares about people, deep deep down. maybe your muse is a bit lost, and maverick is worried about them and wants to help them get back on track –– especially with all the changes happening in the society !! we can plot lil details about this, esp bc it’s a v unique side of mav i’d love to explore !! ( insp: x, x, x )
bad influences: those who partake in the sins that maverick just loves to lap up. they feed off of each others’ energy, often encouraging more drinking, more drugs, more sex. it’s a bit of a never-ending circle, but one that maverick keeps coming back to, for some reason. ( insp: x )
frenemies: this could be some sort of intellectual challenger kind of deal ? someone mav actually appreciates having in his life, though they butt heads a lot maybe for some reason !! ( insp: x )
disliked: they probably find maverick’s personality appalling or annoying, they probably find him pretentious af and super hypocritical for preaching so much about morals, when he drinks and uses drugs and just fucks around half the time. they could call him out for his flaws, or we could go down a completely different route of them having some weird history of mutual plots ??? so so much room for possibility here !!
+ have a couple more in my wanted plots tag here ! but literally, as a self-proclaimed angst and plot ho, please hmu with any and all ideas you might have !! i can’t wait to get started w all of u !!!
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ficsandpieces · 6 years ago
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If you have time, can I request #15 and #32 for Reiji x reader? Your writing is lovely! Thank you so much for posting these 💚
Aww, Anon! Thank YOU!  💕 
You guys are all so nice and polite that I’m beginning to feel guilty about some of the stuff that’s coming out for the prompts… 
15: “Shhh, they’ll hear us.”
Camus drew himself up to his full height and stared down at both you and Reiji.
“What in the world are you talking about, you ridiculous man?”
Reiji frantically pressed his hands against Camus’s mouth, his eyes wild.
“Myu-chan! Not so loud! They’ve got pretty good hearing!”
His eyes hardening, Camus slapped Reiji’s hands away and stabbed a finger in your direction.
“You! Explain why you buffoons are blocking the only entrance to the apartment,” His glare intensified. “And make sure you make more sense than that fool over there.”
Your back still to the door, you told Camus that you and Reiji had spotted two very large rats in the living room, hence why both of you were currently out in the common corridor barricading the main door.
“And you imbeciles thought that the best way of dealing with the problem was to simply prevent entry and hope the vermin do away with themselves?” You shivered at the frosty contempt dripping from Camus’s voice.
“W-ell…” Reiji put his hands together and started tapping his fingers together nervously. “Now that you mention it… But! But they’re really, really huge! I’ve never seen such huge rats before!” He grabbed hold of you for back up. “Right? Tell him how scary those monsters are! There’s nothing we can do against something like that!”
“Kotobuki,” The venom that came attached with Reiji’s name would have killed a lesser man. “Consider that there exists such a professional service as pest extermination.”
“Non!” Reiji firmly crossed his arms in a large ‘X’ in front of his chest. “If word gets out that Quartet Night literally lives in a rat’s nest, that’s bye bye to our public image! More importantly,” Here he clung to you and looked back at Camus pitifully. “If Manager-san finds out and comes over to investigate and sees my honey’s things in there…”
You patted Reiji’s head affectionately, touched that he was thinking about the possibility of your relationship with him being blown. The touching moment was short-lived though, as Camus unceremoniously shoved the two of you out of the way, wrenched open the door of the apartment and entered, his icy rage leaving a visible trail behind him.
“No, Myu-chan!” You had to hold Reiji back from following him in. “Come back! You can’t handle them!”
“I do not see any trace of these rats that you were blabbering on about,” Camus’s voice rang out, threatening immediate retribution on the two of you. “If I find out that this is simply another one of your idiotic pranks– Hmm? What is this?”
There was a brief silence.
“Myu-chan?” Reiji called out timidly. “Are you still alive?”
“Yes,” Camus replied dryly from inside. ”Though I doubt you will be able to say the same of yourself once I– BY HER MAJESTY’S NAME!” Both you and Reiji jumped back instinctively at Camus’s sudden shout. “WHAT ARE YOU?! I have never seen such– BACK! BACK, YOU FOUL FIENDS!”
The door abruptly slammed shut. Reiji threw himself against it and started banging on its surface.
“Myu-chan! Don’t die!”
It sounded as if there was a storm in the apartment as you heard things being thrown around, crashing against the walls and door, interspersed with Camus’s roaring and for some reason, short violent bursts of a very familiar rattling sound.
“Disgusting vermin! You will not best a knight in the service of Her Majesty the Queen, do you hear me? HAVE AT YOU, FOUL BEASTS!”
It was a long time before the door finally opened again and Camus stepped out. Flicking his hair out of his face, he pointedly ignored you and Reiji staring in disbelief at his disheveled clothing.
“I expect to see the bodies disposed of and the apartment as spotless as the day we moved in when I return.”
Dropping something bloody into Reiji’s limp hands, he turned on his heel and stalked down the corridor. The two of you stared after him, then back at the apartment, Reiji struck speechless for the first time since you knew him.
You were working up the courage to look through the opened door when Reiji looked down at what Camus had given him and shrieked.
“MY MARACAS! My poor babies, what did Myu-chan do to you?!”
32: “Your eyes are red… Were you crying?”
Wrinkling his nose, Reiji screwed up his face and stared at you in astonishment.
“Your breath… Are you drunk?”
Your eyes filled with tears, you fell forward into Reiji’s arms and started limply smacking him around the shoulders.
“It’s your fault,” you hiccuped weakly. “Stupid Reiji…”
“I just got back! I haven’t had time to do anything yet!” he squeaked in surprise while feigning off your wavering fists.
“Exactly!” You drunkenly tried pushing him away but ended up allowing him to pull you in towards him instead. Propping your chin up on his chest, you tried your best to glare up at him. “Why’d you have to go away for so long?”
“It was for work! We had a tour, my darling! I’m… pretty sure I told you before we left?”
“But I missed you!” You bawled, ignoring his yelp of pain when you suddenly banged both your fists on his shoulders.
You had walked past a liquor store on your way home that day and wandered in out of boredom and to distract yourself from Reiji’s absence. When the owner asked what you wanted, you had morosely replied “something to stop you from missing your stupid, perfect boyfriend”. The owner had provided a selection and you, in a sudden fit of recklessness, had promptly bought everything on the counter, came home and proceeded to work on literally downing yourself in your sorrows.
You had been halfway done and still going strong when the door to your apartment opened and Reiji had burst in with a huge grin, open arms and a declaration of “Guess who got back early– Y/N?!”.
“It’s your fault for abandoning me,” you sobbed into his collar. “Always, always leaving me behind while you go around the world and never thinking about how I feel when I can’t see you…”
“Darling, my heart, light of my life,” Reiji fawned, pressing his face into the top of your head, one hand stroking your hair while the other supported you around your waist. Cupping your face in his hands, he tenderly wiped away the trails of tears on your cheeks with his thumbs. “You’re the reason I’m still here, you know?”
“Dunno,” you said sulkily, not really listening as your mood suddenly took a turn for the worse. You tried to push him away again. “Don’t wanna see you anymore.”
“Eh? Wait, wait, no no no! Come back, my honey!”
Frantically catching you around the waist, Reiji lifted you up and sat back heavily on the sofa. You squirmed as you tried to get off his lap but he firmly locked you in his arms.
“I was lonely too, you know,” he said, one hand going around your head to press you into the crook of his neck. “In fact, I bet I missed you much more than you missed me.”
Breathing in the scent of his cologne, your fluctuating alcohol-soaked feelings finally begun to settle down. Closing your eyes, one of your hands came up to curl into his shirt as you leaned into him.
“Missed you so much…” you mumbled. “Started to hate being alone after knowing you.” Feeling his chest rise and fall with his breathing under your hand, you peered up at him. “I dreamed about you, you know. But when I woke up you weren’t there.” You said plaintively, your voice small. “It hurt so much.”
You had never seen his eyes look so soft as they did now. “I’m sorry,” He leaned down to kiss you on the forehead, his hand cupped around your head. “I feel the same whenever we’re apart. Did you know that?”
You didn’t reply him, your arms wrapping around his chest, your hands clutching the back of his shirt as you sighed his name into his skin.
“Don’t go anywhere. Don’t leave me alone again.”
Pressing slow, light kisses into the side of your neck, his lips came to rest against your ear, his arms warm and firm around your shoulders.
“Alright. Never again.”
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firesong-writes69 · 8 years ago
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laura at thanksgiving with carmilla’s family
Firsts: Thanksgiving Tradition
Carmilla nervously fixed the bow tie on her suit. She then wrung her hands together, shifting awkwardly in her seat, and glanced shyly at her friend.
Laura looked beautiful tonight. She wore a red sweater with a green scarf and had her hair up in a nice braid. Carmilla admired the way Laura’s eyes sparkled with how excited she was. The tiny cupcake was filled to the brim with joy.
Carmilla wasn’t normally the type to settle down. Nor to interact with other humans. She kept to herself, spending hours in the university library, reading up on philosophers like Camus and Epicurus and Seneca. She met Laura during finals week, when the poor thing was frantic about her own philosophy final and was sprawled out on the floor, books and cocoa in front of her, hair a frazzled mess.
Perhaps it was that Laura was nearly in tears. Or that she had pulled half of her hair out. But Carmilla just couldn’t sit quietly in her comfy chair and let her suffer. She wanted to help. So, pushing down the anxiety that bubbled in her chest, she curiously quips, “Y'know cupcake, you’re not going to learn any of that material with your head pressed into the textbook like that.”
“It doesn’t hurt to try.” Laura mumbles.
And from then on, their friendship blossomed. It was strange for Carmilla. Typically she didn’t make friends this well, but there was something… different about Laura.
And through Laura, she met her annoying group of ginger nerd friends. She enjoyed the company of some, Lafontaine and Perry. Others, like Kirsch or Danny, not so much. Mel was slowly growing on her; Carmilla found it funny how the no nonsense, grouchy one of the group turns to mush whenever she interacts with her girlfriend Charolette, Silas University’s personal historian. Those two are so in love it makes Carmilla gag.
“Carm?” The young woman blinked back into existence after hearing her soft voice, and discreetly hid her shaking hands beneath her legs. “Hey. Are you okay?”
“Yeah. Fine. Totally fine.”
Laura gave her a gentle smile, “Because you have literally been quiet this entire car ride and I just recited the whole script of the Bee Movie.”
Carmilla blinked, “Wait, what the fuck?”
Her friend laughed, “Just keeping you on your toes, silly. I had the radio on.”
“Christ, why am I friends with you.”
“I gave you a freshly baked batch of cookies in return for helping me ace that philosophy final,” Laura grins, and Carmilla’s stomach flips, “admit it. You only love me for the cookies and sweets.”
Carmilla grew quiet at that, blushing.
Laura cleared her throat, shaking her head to clear the awkwardness. “Anyway, thanks for letting me spend thanksgiving with you. It’s… a long way from Canada and this’ll be my first holiday season spending it without my dad. He argued with me that sending me back for a weekend trip wouldn’t be worth the money.” She smiles, “That was sweet of you, Carm.”
Carmilla smiles back, “You’re the first friend I made at Silas. I couldn’t leave you hanging.”
“Well, what do yah know. Scrooge Mcvampire really DOES have a heart.” Laura laughs, gently pinching Carm’s cheek. Sparks coursed through her entire being. She wondered if Laura felt them too. “Now. Fess up. Why are you nervous?”
Carmilla’s mouth gaped open. Damn. Laura was good. They’ve only known each other for a month, and yet, Laura could read her better than any of her siblings.
“I’m nervous about my family,” Carmilla admitted, shaking her head, “They’re a bit… um….”
Suddenly the door to Carmilla’s home burst open, causing the young woman to flinch.
“MAMA! KITTY’S HERE!”
“…dramatic.”
Laura blinks.
“It’s BEEN THREE THOUSAND YEARS, KITTY!” A young boy bellowed, running down the stairs. He looked like a miniature version of Carm, and wore an adorable super man onesie and glasses on the bridge of his nose.
Carmilla breathed out a chuckle and opened the car door, letting herself out and engulfing the young boy into a hug.
Laura’s heart melted.
“WILLIAM LUCE MORGAN, how many times do I have to tell you, DO NOT RUN OUT OF THE HOUSE WITHOUT SHOES?! YOU’LL CATCH A COLD!” yelled a new voice, and the doorframe now revealed a glamorous-looking woman wearing a ball gown dress and diamond earrings.
Her expression changed when she saw Carmilla. “Little monster! You’re home!” She hurried over to greet them, “William, release your hold on her, give her a second to get out of the car.”
Carmilla laughs, and Laura smiles as William kept his grip on her leg while she hugs her sibling.
“Now. Are you going to be rude and not introduce me to your little friend who kindly drove you here? Or shall I go over there myself?”
“Mattie,” Carmilla grumbles.
William’s eyes brightened, “Carm’s gotta girlfriend!”
“She’s not my girlfriend, you brat!” The young woman exclaimed, hitting him across the head.
Laura giggles, loving the interaction between the three and boldly stepping over, bumping shoulders with Carm. She notices the shy smile her friend gives her and the blush forming on her cheeks.
She kindly extended her hand, “Thank you for your kind hospitality and inviting me into your home for the day. My name is Laura. Laura Hollis. I am a freshman at Silas university and currently studying journalism. Hoping a company can pick up my videos and blogs online so I can get my name out there. Admiringly… I haven’t had much luck with that one.” She scratched the back of her head, “When you’re a small town chick that’s officially flown the nest, realizing that you might not reach your goals right away really crushes the determination factor.”
Mattie smiles softly, ignoring Laura’s hand and going in for a hug, “You’ll get there someday, love. Don’t push yourself too hard. You never know when someone’s going to notice you.”
Laura felt warmth and comfort in her embrace, “At least someone else is encouraging.” She smiles shyly, eluding to the fact that her father doesn’t exactly agree with her career choice in life or find it practical. Carmilla squeezed her shoulder.
Mattie clapped her hands together, “Well. I don’t know about you three, but it’s cold as the North Pole out here and there’s a turkey waiting for us. Who here’s ready to stuff our faces and ignore all the political catastrophes going on in our government right now? Honestly, the world would be such a better place if I became the president and not that nasty, wretched Vordenburg scum.”
Carmilla’s eyes widened, “Yes. Turkey. Excellent way to start with an old American tradition, Mattie. Please lead us the way to the kitchen.” The quicker she can divert political talk, the better. She then pressed her hands onto Mattie’s back and pushed her towards their door.
Laura chuckled at them. William smiled up at her, reaching out to put his tiny hand into hers. “Carmilla likes you.”
“Of course she does, she’s my friend.”
“I mean, liiiiiiiike liiiiiikes you. She never brings anyone home. So you two should probably be getting married soon.”
“M-married?!” Laura sputtered. Shit. Kids really have no sense of time. “William, how old do you think I am?”
“I dunno. Twenty four?”
“I’m nineteen, kiddo.”
William paused. “Do you love my sister?”
Laura blushed. “I-I… w-well…” she shrugged her shoulders, “Perhaps someday.”
That seemed to be a good enough answer for the boy. “Then you’ll tell her someday.” Laura sighs, heart growing three sizes in her chest. They smiled at each other for a moment, before William shuddered and started jumping up and down, “Aaah! Cold! Cold, cold, cold, cold!”
Laura laughs, gently ushering the boy inside his home. “C'mon, kiddo. I can smell the turkey from here and it’s calling my name. You can warm up inside.”
“LAST ONE THERE IS A ROTTEN EGG!” William rushed out, leaving Laura in the dust.
Hoo boy. This certainly was going to be an interesting dinner. Laura was excited. She couldn’t wait.
TO BE CONTINUED??
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miraculously-fangirling · 8 years ago
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Springtime Connection - Chapter 2
Marinette entered the classroom, her head a flurry of new worries and excitement. Alya patted her friend’s seat with a grin spread ear to ear. Marinette looked at her hands in her lap, her lips fighting between a grin and a frown. Instead she just went with a stiff smile. She didn’t know what expression to make. Should she have been glad that Alya made this plan or should she be dreading the long conversations that she would inevitably have with Adrien?  Marinette had a bad feeling, like she was going to screw everything up in the worst way possible, but her growing responsibilities quickly pushed those thoughts away. Alya gave Marinette a pat on the back as she sat down.
“Aw, what has you so down, girl? Shouldn’t you be all excited about homeroom today?”
Marinette glanced at her friend. Alya was right, she should be happy, excited even. Not scared. Not so stressed. Not yet anyways.
Marinette smiled, giving her friend an exaggerated wave. “Don’t worry about me. I just didn’t sleep enough. Thinking about this and all,” she explained. Marinette opened her eyes, remembering Alya’s help from yesterday. “Oh yeah, did Ms. Bustier get the list?”
Alya grinned. “Of course she did.” She answered with a wink. Marinette couldn’t figure out if that wink meant some turn in the near future. Marinette hoped not; she didn’t need surprises. She needed time. She needed time to be a student and a leader and a hero and a teen all at once. It always seemed like there never enough hours in the day.
Ms. Bustier walked behind her table, looking at her clipboard. She slowly listed out the various jobs onto the chalkboard. Marinette set her head onto the table. She doesn’t need to read the list. She made it after all.
“What the -“ Chloe squeaked, “How am I not working with Adrien?”
Marinette smirked. Of course she put Adrien in decorations and Chloe in costume design. Was that vain of her? Maybe. But it was too tempting.
Alya chuckled to herself as Ms. Bustier reached the end of the list. Even Bustier glanced at the pair of girls confused as she wrote down the last two names. Marinette’s stomach twisted with Alya’s chuckle. She glanced at the board and scanned the list. She stopped when she saw who was in marketing. Alya’s name showed proudly next to the marketing position. Marinette gave her friend a furrowed brow before jumping to the end of the list where the organizers were listed.  Marinette and Adrien were listed as the head organizers. The blonde turned around confused as Ms. Bustier sent the students to their respective groups. Nino winked at his friend as he and Alya met with some of the other students.
Chloe stomped over to Bustier’s desk just as the teacher reviewed her list.
“Ms. Bustier,” she huffed, “Don’t you think that Adrien and I would make a better team? I’m sure that Marinette could do all the organizing on her own.” The blonde glanced to her two partners, Sabrina and Nathaniel.
Ms. Bustier sighed. “Look Chloe, this is an exercise for you to learn to problem solve. If you have any issues, talk to your class representative.” The teacher gave Marinette a sympathetic nod before returned to grading last week’s homework. Chloe stomped over to Marinette’s seat.
“Now Marinette,” she said with an upturned nose. Marinette groaned. “We ALL know that Adrien and I work the best as a team. We’ve known each other forever and his father is the best designer. He must a have a gene or two in him somewhere, right?” The blonde leaned against Marinette’s desk, “Now why don’t you just go right on up there and change those positions, huh?” She giggled to herself as Marinette looked down to her hands. Adrien opened his mouth to retort his childhood friend, but Alya piped in before that was even necessary.
The brunette’s sharp hearing alerted her to the class brat’s pushy tone. She didn’t like Marinette getting cornered or her little scheme getting messed with. She stepped away from Nino and the other committees to step between Chloe and Marinette. “Actually,” Alya said with a smile, “We put you over there because your designs are just so great. There was no way we couldn’t put you there.”
“Then why does Adrien have to be here. Shouldn’t you be planning stuff?”
“Actually Marinette and I,” Alya winked at her best friend, “talked about it and we came to the conclusion that me being in marketing would be better than planning. Adrien is a pretty organized guy so putting him in organizing was a no brainer, right?” Adrien looked away, scratching the back of his head while Chloe gritted her teeth. The blonde couldn’t find another argument to use and huffed off with Sabrina at her side receiving the bad end of Chloe’s temper.
The period proceeded with the students meeting in their designated groups. Marinette awkwardly played with her thumbs as Adrien turned around in his seat. He didn’t quite get why he was partnered with Marinette but he didn’t particularly mind either. She was nice, if a little awkward. “So,” he said, tapping on the table to gain the girl’s attention, “Where should we start?”
Marinette lifted her eyes but messed with her bangs to (hopefully) hide her rosy cheeks. She still couldn’t believe that Alya pulled this. What was she going to do for the next weeks? Marinette thought to all of the time and cooperation and, well, talking she was going to have to do with Adrien and it rocked her. Her heart raced just at the thought of approaching him. Having him actually in front of her made her head go blank. She almost forgot what she was supposed to be doing when she met his bright green eyes and confident smile. He was just so… him. There was no other way she could put it. “W-well, we should probably e-establish the overall look and feel of the cafe and then figure out the kinds of foods and costumes we’re going to do.” Adrien nodded along and Marinette continued. She continued down a list of things they’d have to have sorted out by the end of the day. They decided on three things to focus on that night: theme, food, and decor. They thought it was a good start. Adrien was proud of the fact that they had made such a cohesive plan. Marinette was just glad that she hadn't fainted from pure Adrien exposure. The homeroom bell rang and the duo agreed to text about details later that night. It was a sound plan that sent Marinette to cloud nine.
Alya and Nino took their seats as Ms. Bustier called for the class’ attention. Alya elbowed Marinette but the blue eyed girl just gave her friend a side long glance. Alya giggled at her friend’s reaction while taking out her class materials. Alya’s plan had gone off perfectly, with just the slight Chloe hiccup but that was to be expected. Alya didn’t expect Marinette to suddenly be a social butterfly around the teen model but the fact that Marinette actually talked to him for a prolonged amount of time was a true accomplishment. Marinette scribbled in her notebook as Ms. Bustier lectured on Camus and his strange works. Classes flew by and Marinette scribbled more. She scribbled ideas for costumes and themes and stories and foods to fit this imaginative world.
Meanwhile, Adrien’s head flipped from literature to designs. Admittedly, he wasn’t very creative. Ironic, considering that his father was a top fashion designer. At least his scientific skills made up for his lack of creativity. His mind kept returning to the bakery. To Marinette’s parents whose croissants were pastry heaven. He could pig out all he wanted there, everything was so good. Almost too good. It was homey and comfortable. Did he want a simple cafe like the Dupain-Cheng’s or something zany like those ones from Japan that he had about from the internet. Or did he want something more themed? Like superheroes, mythology, animals? He wasn’t sure and indecisiveness quickly took root.
The lunch bell soon rang and the whole class quickly filed outside. Some gathered into their usual groups, but many talked to their festival partners. No one wanted to go home today. The cafe idea had everyone excited. It was something new, completely new. Not just to their class but to their school in general. Sure, cafes had been done. Themed cafes weren’t new either, but none ever did full costumes. There weren’t enough artsy students but Bustier’s class had plenty of artistic talent to spare. It was a perfect recipe for a new and exciting exhibit.
“What do you mean we should do superheroes?” Chloe screeched while Nathaniel shrunk into his shoulders. He held his sketchbook out in front of him like a flimsy shield but it did little to protect him from Chloe and Sabrina’s glares. The blonde flipped her ponytail. “Well, I believe that idea is complete garbage,” she mused, “We should have something elegant and extravagant like a ball. I could be the queen, and…” she looked around the room and pulled Adrien from his seat, “Adrien could be Prince Charming. Isn’t it perfect?”
Adrien gritted his teeth as he pulled away from Chloe’s grasp. He quickly pasted on a faint smile. “Look, Chloe. I’m not sure that’s exactly what we’re going for here.”
“Oh Adrien, you’re so naive. Someone needs to teach you about the ways of school festivals. The exhibits are supposed to be glamorous, right?”
Adrien opened his mouth to answer but Ms. Bustier came to his rescue with her heels clacking against the floor. “Chloe,” she snapped, “Please respect the opinions of your peers.”
Chloe huffed before turning to the teacher. “But miss!” Ms. Bustier glared at the young girl. Chloe gave in and returned to her seat. “Yes, miss,” she murmured before walking back to her seat with Sabrina at her side.
Ms. Bustier returned to her seat and Nathaniel approached Adrien. “Thank you for doing that.” Nathaniel said to the irritated model. Adrien didn’t like conflict. He especially didn’t like Chloe stirring the pot to better her position. How was she his only friend before school? He couldn’t figure out why he ever played with her.
“Oh, no problem,” he said with a grin. He managed to shoo away some of his irritation but some still persisted in the crevices of his mind.
“Oh right,” Nathaniel said, lifting his notebook, “Have you and Marinette figured out our theme?” Adrien bit his lip. That’s what he needed to talk to Marinette for. Adrien shook his head. Nathaniel looked down to his battered notebook, “Well, I hope that you two will take this into consideration.” Nathaniel opened his notebook to showcase a scene with Ladybug, Chat Noir, and an assortment of original, animal themed superheroes. The cityscape behind the heroes was dotted with square windows and dotted stars.
Adrien smiled at his classmates drawings. “That’s really cool,” he said, “Mind if I take a picture?” Nathaniel shook his head with a slightly confident smile. Adrien snapped the photo. He was so going to show this to Marinette that night. He wondered what she would think, especially since she got a daily dose of Ladybug and Chat Noir from Alya. Would she be annoyed by it or excited? He didn’t know. He looked at the photo on his phone again. Nathaniel was almost too good at drawing it seemed. Ladybug’s triumphant smile was perfectly captured in the pencil drawing and it made Adrien’s heart skip.
Chapter 1: https://miraculously-fangirling.tumblr.com/post/157384564055/springtime-connection-chapter-1
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networkingdefinition · 6 years ago
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Money Quotes
Official Website: Money Quotes
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• A bank is a place that will lend you money if you can prove that you don’t need it.- Bob Hope • A bank is a place where they lend you an umbrella in fair weather and ask for it back when it begins to rain. – Robert Frost • A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking about real money. – Everett Dirksen • A business that makes nothing but money is a poor business. – Henry Ford • A drunkard would not give money to sober people. He said they would only eat it, and buy clothes and send their children to school with it. – Samuel Butler • A fool and his money are lucky enough to get together in the first place. – Michael Douglas • A fool and his money are soon elected. – Will Rogers • A fool and his money are soon married. – Carolyn Wells • A man with money is no match against a man on a mission. – Doyle Brunson • A person can no more make money suddenly and largely, and be unharmed by it, than one could suddenly grow from a child’s stature to an adult’s without harm. – Henry Ward Beecher • A rich man is nothing but a poor man with money. – W. C. Fields • A rich man told me recently that a liberal is a man who tells other people what to do with their money. – Amiri Baraka • A wise man should have money in his head, but not in his heart. – Jonathan Swift • A woman’s best protection is a little money of her own. – Clare Boothe Luce • Advertising: the science of arresting the human intelligence long enough to get money from it. – Stephen Leacock • Always try to rub up against money, for if you rub up against money long enough, some of it may rub off on you. – Damon Runyon • An important lever for sustained action in tackling poverty and reducing hunger is money. – Gro Harlem Brundtland • Anybody who thinks money will make you happy, hasn’t got money. – David Geffen • As I sat at the Cafe I said to myself, They may talk as they please about what they call pelf, They may sneer as they like about eating and drinking, But help it I cannot, I cannot help thinking How pleasant it is to have money, heigh-ho! How pleasant it is to have money! – Arthur Hugh Clough
jQuery(document).ready(function($) var data = action: 'polyxgo_products_search', type: 'Product', keywords: 'Money', orderby: 'rand', order: 'DESC', template: '1', limit: '68', columns: '4', viewall:'Shop All', ; jQuery.post(spyr_params.ajaxurl,data, function(response) var obj = jQuery.parseJSON(response); jQuery('#thelovesof_money').html(obj); jQuery('#thelovesof_money img.swiper-lazy:not(.swiper-lazy-loaded)' ).each(function () var img = jQuery(this); img.attr("src",img.data('src')); img.addClass( 'swiper-lazy-loaded' ); img.removeAttr('data-src'); ); ); ); • Business, you know, may bring you money, but friendship hardly ever does. – Jane Austen • But for money and the need of it, there would not be half the friendship in the world. It is powerful for good if divinely used. Give it plenty of air and it is sweet as the hawthorn; shut it up and it cankers and breeds worms. – George MacDonald • Capital as such is not evil; it is its wrong use that is evil. Capital in some form or other will always be needed. – Mahatma Gandhi • Civilized countries generally adopt gold or silver or both as money. – Alfred Marshall • Don’t give your money to the church. They should be giving their money to you. – George Carlin • Don’t spend money on things… spend money on experiences. You’ll enjoy life a lot more! – Ziad K. Abdelnour • Don’t stay in bed, unless you can make money in bed. – George Burns • Economy does not lie in sparing money, but in spending it wisely. – Thomas Huxley • Economy is half the battle in life, but it is not so hard to earn money as to spend it well. Hundreds would never have known want if they had not first known waste. – Charles Spurgeon • Find something in life that you love doing. If you make a lot of money, that’s a bonus, and if you don’t, you still won’t hate going to work. – Jeff Foxworthy • Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys. – P. J. O’Rourke • God gave me my money. I believe the power to make money is a gift from God . to be developed and used to the best of our ability for the good of mankind. Having been endowed with the gift I possess, I believe it is my duty to make money and still more money and to use the money I make for the good of my fellow man according to the dictates of my conscience. – John D. Rockefeller • Having money is rather like being a blond. It is more fun but not vital. – Mary Quant • He that is of the opinion money will do everything may well be suspected of doing everything for money. – Benjamin Franklin • He that wants money, means, and content is without three good friends. – William Shakespeare • Her voice is full of money. – F. Scott Fitzgerald • Honesty is the best policy – when there is money in it. – Mark Twain • How pleasant it is to have money. – Arthur Hugh Clough • I am fiercely loyal to those willing to put their money where my mouth is. – Paul Harvey • I am happy to make money. I want to make more money, make more music, eat Big Macs and drink Budweisers. – Kid Rock • I don’t want to make money; I want to make a difference. – Lady Gaga • I haven’t got as much money as some folks, but I’ve got as much impudence as any of them, and that’s the next thing to money. – Josh Billings • I love money. I love everything about it. I bought some pretty good stuff. Got me a $300 pair of socks. Got a fur sink. An electric dog polisher. A gasoline powered turtleneck sweater. And, of course, I bought some dumb stuff, too. – Steve Martin • I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country… corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed. – Abraham Lincoln • I’d like to live like a poor man with a lot of money. – Pablo Picasso • If a person gets his attitude toward money straight, it will help straighten out almost every other area in his life. – Billy Graham • If I have enough money to eat I’m good. – Shia LaBeouf • If money is your hope for independence you will never have it. The only real security that a man will have in this world is a reserve of knowledge, experience, and ability. – Henry Ford • If saving money is wrong, I don’t want to be right! – William Shatner • If the money we donate helps one child or can ease the pain of one parent, those funds are well spent. – Carl Karcher • If women didn’t exist, all the money in the world would have no meaning. – Aristotle Onassis • If you can actually count your money, then you’re not a rich man. – J. Paul Getty • If you can count your money, you don’t have a billion dollars. – J. Paul Getty • If you don’t find a way to make money while you sleep, you will work until you die. – Warren Buffett • If you have “needing money” in your vibration, then you will keep attracting needing money. You have to find a way of being happy NOW, feeling good NOW, and being in joy NOW, without the money, because those great feelings are how you will feel with the money. Money doesn’t bring happiness – but HAPPINESS BRINGS MONEY. – Rhonda Byrne • If you pay peanuts, you get monkeys. – James Goldsmith • If you would know the value of money, go and try to borrow some. – Benjamin Franklin • If you’d lose a troublesome visitor, lend him money. – Benjamin Franklin • I’m a revolutionary, money means nothing to me. – Frederic Chopin • I’m going to teach you to HATE spending money. – Hume Cronyn • In the world of money and investing, you must learn to control your emotions. – Robert Kiyosaki • Inflation is taxation without legislation. – Milton Friedman • It is good to have money and the things that money can buy, but it’s good too, to check up once in a while and make sure you haven’t lost the things money can’t buy. – George Horace Lorimer • It is money makes the mare to trot. – John Wolcot • It is not the employer who pays the wages. Employers only handle the money. It is the customer who pays the wages. – Henry Ford • It’s a kind of spiritual snobbery that makes people think they can be happy without money. – Albert Camus • I’ve got all the money I’ll ever need, if I die by four o’clock. – Henny Youngman • Liking money like I like it, is nothing less than mysticism. Money is a glory. – Salvador Dali • Magna carta. Master charga. – Michael Keaton • Making money isn’t hard in itself… What’s hard is to earn it doing something worth devoting one’s life to. – Carlos Ruiz Zafon • Many folks think they aren’t good at earning money, when what they don’t know is how to use it. – Frank A. Clark • Marrying into money was not a good thing for me. – Anna Nicole Smith • Men make counterfeit money; in many more cases, money makes counterfeit men. – Sydney J. Harris • Money and women are the most sought after and the least known about of any two things we have. – Will Rogers • Money brings honor, friends, conquest, and realms. – John Milton • Money differs from an automobile or mistress in being equally important to those who have it and those who do not. – John Kenneth Galbraith • Money doesn’t make you happy. I now have $50 million but I was just as happy when I had $48 million. – Arnold Schwarzenegger • Money doesn’t talk, it swears. – Bob Dylan • Money frees you from doing things you dislike. Since I dislike doing nearly everything, money is handy. – Groucho Marx • Money has never made man happy, nor will it, there is nothing in its nature to produce happiness. The more of it one has the more one wants. – Benjamin Franklin • Money is a guarantee that we may have what we want in the future. Though we need nothing at the moment it insures the possibility of satisfying a new desire when it arises. – Aristotle • Money is a needful and precious thing – Louisa May Alcott • Money is always there but the pockets change; it is not in the same pockets after a change, and that is all there is to say about money. – Gertrude Stein • Money is just an idea. – Robert Kiyosaki • Money is like a sixth sense without which you cannot make a complete use of the other five. – W. Somerset Maugham • Money is like an arm or leg – use it or lose it. – Henry Ford • Money is like love; it kills slowly and painfully the one who withholds it, and enlivens the other who turns it on his fellow man. – Khalil Gibran • Money is like manure, of very little use except it be spread. – Francis Bacon • Money is neither my god nor my devil. It is a form of energy that tends to make us more of who we already are, whether it’s greedy or loving. – Dan Millman • Money is not the most important thing in the world. Love is. Fortunately, I love money. – Jackie Mason • Money is not the only answer, but it makes a difference. – Barack Obama • Money is of a prolific generating nature. Money can beget money, and its offspring can beget more. – Benjamin Franklin • Money is only a tool. It will take you wherever you wish, but it will not replace you as the driver. – Ayn Rand • Money is our madness, our vast collective madness. – D. H. Lawrence • Money is power, freedom, a cushion, the root of all evil, the sum of blessings. – Carl Sandburg • Money is the barometer of a society’s virtue. – Ayn Rand • Money is the seed of money, and the first guinea is sometimes more difficult to acquire than the second million. – Jean-Jacques Rousseau • Money is the wise man’s religion. – Euripides • Money is to be sought for first of all; virtue after wealth. [Lat., Quaerenda pecunia primum est; virtus post nummos.] – Horace • Money is usually attracted, not pursued.- Jim Rohn • Money isn’t the most important thing in life, but it’s reasonably close to oxygen on the ‘gotta have it’ scale. – Zig Ziglar • Money makes up in a measure all other wants in men. – William Wycherley • Money may be the husk of many things but not the kernel. It brings you food, but not appetite; medicine, but not health; acquaintance, but not friends; servants, but not loyalty; days of joy, but not peace or happiness. – Henrik Ibsen • Money often costs too much. – Ralph Waldo Emerson • Money plays the largest part in determining the course of history. – Karl Marx • Money problems can always be solved by a man not frightened by them. – Robert A. Heinlein • Money should be used to help others. – Neem Karoli Baba • Money speaks sense in a language all nations understand. – Aphra Behn • Money speaks, but it speaks with a male voice. – Andrea Dworkin • Money talks, bullshit walks. – Stephen King • Money was never a big motivation for me, except as a way to keep score. The real excitement is playing the game. – Donald Trump • Money will buy a pretty good dog, but it won’t buy the wag of his tail. – Josh Billings • Money without brains is always dangerous. – Napoleon Hill • Money, it turned out, was exactly like sex, you thought of nothing else if you didn’t have it and thought of other things if you did. – James A. Baldwin • Money, make money; by honest means if you can; if not, by any means make money. [Lat., Rem facias rem, Recte si possis, si non, quocumque modo rem.] – Horace • Money. . . those who don’t have enough of it are only aware of what it can buy them. When you finally have enough of it you become aware- acutely aware-of all the things it can’t buy … the really important things, like youth, health, love, peace of mind. – F. Paul Wilson • Money. It’s a good servant but a bad master. – Gretchen Rubin • Money’s a horrid thing to follow, but a charming thing to meet. – Henry James • My goal wasn’t to make a ton of money. It was to build good computers. – Steve Wozniak • Never begrudge the money you spend on your own education. – Jim Rohn • No matter how hard you hug your money, it never hugs back.- H. Jackson Brown, Jr. • No one would remember the Good Samaritan if he’d only had good intentions; he had money as well. – Margaret Thatcher • Nobody’s going to do your life for you. You have to do it yourself, whether you’re rich or poor, out of money or raking it in, the beneficiary of ridiculous fortune or terrible injustice. And you have to do it no matter what is true. No matter what is hard. No matter what unjust, sad, sucky things befall you. Self-pity is a dead-end road. You make the choice to drive down it. It’s up to you to decide to stay parked there or to turn around and drive out. – Cheryl Strayed • Nothing comes amiss, so money comes withal. – William Shakespeare • Nothing is so secure as that money will not defeat it. – Marcus Tullius Cicero • Of the billionaires I have known, money just brings out the basic traits in them. If they were jerks before they had money, they are simply jerks with a billion dollars. – Warren Buffett • People ask how can a Jewish kid from the Bronx do preppy clothes? Does it have to do with class and money? It has to do with dreams. – Ralph Lauren • People who say that money isn’t the most important thing in the world are usually broke. – Malcolm Forbes • Quality is free. It’s not a gift, but it’s free. The ‘unquality’ things are what cost money. – Phil Crosby • Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich. – Napoleon Bonaparte • Remember that credit is money. – Benjamin Franklin • Rule No.1: Never lose money. Rule No.2: Never forget rule No.1. – Warren Buffett • Simple, genuine goodness is the best capital to found the business of this life upon. It lasts when fame and money fail, and is the only riches we can take out of this world with us. – Louisa May Alcott • So you think that money is the root of all evil. Have you ever asked what is the root of all money? – Ayn Rand • Some people may complicate it for you, but the formula is simple: Love God more than anything else. More than your ego. More than your money. More than your desires…More than your sleep at dawn. Love God more than anything else, and submission comes natural. Love God more than anything else, and all goodness will follow. – Yasmin Mogahed • Success is having to worry about every damn thing in the world, except money. – Johnny Cash • Successful people make money. It’s not that people who make money become successful, but that successful people attract money. They bring success to what they do. – Wayne Dyer • That money talks, I’ll not deny, I heard it once: It said, ‘Goodbye’. – Richard Armour • The art of living easily as to money is to pitch your scale of living one degree below your means. – Henry Taylor • The chief value of money lies in the fact that one lives in a world in which it is overestimated. – H. L. Mencken • The circulation of confidence is better than the circulation of money. – James Madison • The easiest way for your children to learn about money is for you not to have any. – Katharine Whitehorn • The importance of money flows from it being a link between the present and the future. – John Maynard Keynes • The key to making money is to stay invested. – Suze Orman • The lack of money is the root of all evil. – Mark Twain • The only point in making money is, you can tell some big shot where to go. – Humphrey Bogart • The only way not to think about money is to have a great deal of it. – Edith Wharton • The price we have to pay for money is sometimes liberty. – Robert Louis Stevenson • The real measure of your wealth is how much you’d be worth if you lost all your money. – Bernard Meltzer • The safe way to double your money is to fold it over once and put it in your pocket. – Kin Hubbard • The study of money, above all other fields in economics, is one in which complexity is used to disguise truth or to evade truth, not to reveal it. The process by which banks create money is so simple the mind is repelled. – John Kenneth Galbraith • The universal regard for money is the one hopeful fact in our civilization. – George Bernard Shaw • There are few ways in which a man can be more innocently employed than in getting money. – Samuel Johnson • There are people who have money and people who are rich. – Coco Chanel • There is only one class in the community that thinks more about money than the rich, and that is the poor. The poor can think of nothing else. – Oscar Wilde • There’s only one thing money won’t buy, and that is poverty. – Joe E. Lewis • Time is more valuable than money. You can get more money, but you cannot get more time. – Jim Rohn • To be clever enough to get all that money, one must be stupid enough to want it. – Gilbert K. Chesterton • To give real service you must add something which cannot be bought or measured with money, and that is sincerity and integrity. – Douglas Adams • To have done anything just for money is to have been truly idle. – Henry David Thoreau • Too many of us look upon Americans as dollar chasers. This is a cruel libel, even if it is reiterated thoughtlessly by the Americans themselves. – Albert Einstein • Too many people spend money they haven’t earned to buy things they don’t want to impress people they don’t like. – Will Rogers • War has been good to me from a financial standpoint but I don’t want to make money that way. I don’t want blood money. – Ted Turner
• We all need money, but there are degrees of desperation. – Anthony Burgess • We ought to change the legend on our money from “In God We Trust” to “In Money We Trust.” Because, as a nation, we’ve got far more faith in money these days than we do in God. – Art Hoppe • We teach children to save their money. As an attempt to counteract thoughtless and selfish expenditure, that has value. But it is not positive; it does not lead the child into the safe and useful avenues of self-expression or self-expenditure. To teach a child to invest and use is better than to teach him to save. – Henry Ford • We’ve got to put a lot of money into changing behavior. – Bill Gates • What we really want to do is what we are really meant to do. When we do what we are meant to do, money comes to us, doors open for us, we feel useful, and the work we do feels like play to us. – Julia Cameron • What’s money? A man is a success if he gets up in the morning and goes to bed at night and in between does what he wants to do. – Bob Dylan • What’s worth doing is worth doing for money. – Michael Douglas • When I chased after money, I never had enough. When I got my life on purpose and focused on giving of myself and everything that arrived into my life, then I was prosperous. – Wayne Dyer • When I was young I thought that money was the most important thing in life; now that I am old I know that it is. – Oscar Wilde • When it comes to money, you can’t win. If you focus on making it, you’re materialistic. If you try to but don’t make any, you’re a loser. If you make a lot and keep it, you’re a miser. If you make it and spend it, you’re a spendthrift. If you don’t care about making it, you’re unambitious. If you make a lot and still have it when you die, you’re a fool-for trying to take it with you. The only way to really win with money is to hold it loosely-and be generous with it to accomplish things of value. – John C. Maxwell • When it is a question of money, everybody is of the same religion. – Voltaire • When men are so busy making money that they have no time for anything else, then the day is not far off when they will have no money for anything else. – William J. H. Boetcker • Whoever controls the volume of money in any country is absolute master of all industry and commerce. – James A. Garfield • Whoever said money can’t buy happiness didn’t know where to shop – Gertrude Stein • Whoever said money can’t buy happiness simply didn’t know where to go shopping. – Bo Derek • Why is there so much month left at the end of the money? – John Barrymore • You aren’t wealthy until you have something money can’t buy. – Garth Brooks • You can be young without money but you can’t be old without it. – Tennessee Williams • You can make money two ways – make more, or spend less. – John Hope Bryant • You have reached the pinnacle of success as soon as you become uninterested in money, compliments, or publicity. – Thomas Wolfe • You must gain control over your money or the lack of it will forever control you. – Dave Ramsey
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equitiesstocks · 6 years ago
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Money Quotes
Official Website: Money Quotes
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• A bank is a place that will lend you money if you can prove that you don’t need it.- Bob Hope • A bank is a place where they lend you an umbrella in fair weather and ask for it back when it begins to rain. – Robert Frost • A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking about real money. – Everett Dirksen • A business that makes nothing but money is a poor business. – Henry Ford • A drunkard would not give money to sober people. He said they would only eat it, and buy clothes and send their children to school with it. – Samuel Butler • A fool and his money are lucky enough to get together in the first place. – Michael Douglas • A fool and his money are soon elected. – Will Rogers • A fool and his money are soon married. – Carolyn Wells • A man with money is no match against a man on a mission. – Doyle Brunson • A person can no more make money suddenly and largely, and be unharmed by it, than one could suddenly grow from a child’s stature to an adult’s without harm. – Henry Ward Beecher • A rich man is nothing but a poor man with money. – W. C. Fields • A rich man told me recently that a liberal is a man who tells other people what to do with their money. – Amiri Baraka • A wise man should have money in his head, but not in his heart. – Jonathan Swift • A woman’s best protection is a little money of her own. – Clare Boothe Luce • Advertising: the science of arresting the human intelligence long enough to get money from it. – Stephen Leacock • Always try to rub up against money, for if you rub up against money long enough, some of it may rub off on you. – Damon Runyon • An important lever for sustained action in tackling poverty and reducing hunger is money. – Gro Harlem Brundtland • Anybody who thinks money will make you happy, hasn’t got money. – David Geffen • As I sat at the Cafe I said to myself, They may talk as they please about what they call pelf, They may sneer as they like about eating and drinking, But help it I cannot, I cannot help thinking How pleasant it is to have money, heigh-ho! How pleasant it is to have money! – Arthur Hugh Clough
jQuery(document).ready(function($) var data = action: 'polyxgo_products_search', type: 'Product', keywords: 'Money', orderby: 'rand', order: 'DESC', template: '1', limit: '68', columns: '4', viewall:'Shop All', ; jQuery.post(spyr_params.ajaxurl,data, function(response) var obj = jQuery.parseJSON(response); jQuery('#thelovesof_money').html(obj); jQuery('#thelovesof_money img.swiper-lazy:not(.swiper-lazy-loaded)' ).each(function () var img = jQuery(this); img.attr("src",img.data('src')); img.addClass( 'swiper-lazy-loaded' ); img.removeAttr('data-src'); ); ); ); • Business, you know, may bring you money, but friendship hardly ever does. – Jane Austen • But for money and the need of it, there would not be half the friendship in the world. It is powerful for good if divinely used. Give it plenty of air and it is sweet as the hawthorn; shut it up and it cankers and breeds worms. – George MacDonald • Capital as such is not evil; it is its wrong use that is evil. Capital in some form or other will always be needed. – Mahatma Gandhi • Civilized countries generally adopt gold or silver or both as money. – Alfred Marshall �� Don’t give your money to the church. They should be giving their money to you. – George Carlin • Don’t spend money on things… spend money on experiences. You’ll enjoy life a lot more! – Ziad K. Abdelnour • Don’t stay in bed, unless you can make money in bed. – George Burns • Economy does not lie in sparing money, but in spending it wisely. – Thomas Huxley • Economy is half the battle in life, but it is not so hard to earn money as to spend it well. Hundreds would never have known want if they had not first known waste. – Charles Spurgeon • Find something in life that you love doing. If you make a lot of money, that’s a bonus, and if you don’t, you still won’t hate going to work. – Jeff Foxworthy • Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys. – P. J. O’Rourke • God gave me my money. I believe the power to make money is a gift from God . to be developed and used to the best of our ability for the good of mankind. Having been endowed with the gift I possess, I believe it is my duty to make money and still more money and to use the money I make for the good of my fellow man according to the dictates of my conscience. – John D. Rockefeller • Having money is rather like being a blond. It is more fun but not vital. – Mary Quant • He that is of the opinion money will do everything may well be suspected of doing everything for money. – Benjamin Franklin • He that wants money, means, and content is without three good friends. – William Shakespeare • Her voice is full of money. – F. Scott Fitzgerald • Honesty is the best policy – when there is money in it. – Mark Twain • How pleasant it is to have money. – Arthur Hugh Clough • I am fiercely loyal to those willing to put their money where my mouth is. – Paul Harvey • I am happy to make money. I want to make more money, make more music, eat Big Macs and drink Budweisers. – Kid Rock • I don’t want to make money; I want to make a difference. – Lady Gaga • I haven’t got as much money as some folks, but I’ve got as much impudence as any of them, and that’s the next thing to money. – Josh Billings • I love money. I love everything about it. I bought some pretty good stuff. Got me a $300 pair of socks. Got a fur sink. An electric dog polisher. A gasoline powered turtleneck sweater. And, of course, I bought some dumb stuff, too. – Steve Martin • I see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country… corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed. – Abraham Lincoln • I’d like to live like a poor man with a lot of money. – Pablo Picasso • If a person gets his attitude toward money straight, it will help straighten out almost every other area in his life. – Billy Graham • If I have enough money to eat I’m good. – Shia LaBeouf • If money is your hope for independence you will never have it. The only real security that a man will have in this world is a reserve of knowledge, experience, and ability. – Henry Ford • If saving money is wrong, I don’t want to be right! – William Shatner • If the money we donate helps one child or can ease the pain of one parent, those funds are well spent. – Carl Karcher • If women didn’t exist, all the money in the world would have no meaning. – Aristotle Onassis • If you can actually count your money, then you’re not a rich man. – J. Paul Getty • If you can count your money, you don’t have a billion dollars. – J. Paul Getty • If you don’t find a way to make money while you sleep, you will work until you die. – Warren Buffett • If you have “needing money” in your vibration, then you will keep attracting needing money. You have to find a way of being happy NOW, feeling good NOW, and being in joy NOW, without the money, because those great feelings are how you will feel with the money. Money doesn’t bring happiness – but HAPPINESS BRINGS MONEY. – Rhonda Byrne • If you pay peanuts, you get monkeys. – James Goldsmith • If you would know the value of money, go and try to borrow some. – Benjamin Franklin • If you’d lose a troublesome visitor, lend him money. – Benjamin Franklin • I’m a revolutionary, money means nothing to me. – Frederic Chopin • I’m going to teach you to HATE spending money. – Hume Cronyn • In the world of money and investing, you must learn to control your emotions. – Robert Kiyosaki • Inflation is taxation without legislation. – Milton Friedman • It is good to have money and the things that money can buy, but it’s good too, to check up once in a while and make sure you haven’t lost the things money can’t buy. – George Horace Lorimer • It is money makes the mare to trot. – John Wolcot • It is not the employer who pays the wages. Employers only handle the money. It is the customer who pays the wages. – Henry Ford • It’s a kind of spiritual snobbery that makes people think they can be happy without money. – Albert Camus • I’ve got all the money I’ll ever need, if I die by four o’clock. – Henny Youngman • Liking money like I like it, is nothing less than mysticism. Money is a glory. – Salvador Dali • Magna carta. Master charga. – Michael Keaton • Making money isn’t hard in itself… What’s hard is to earn it doing something worth devoting one’s life to. – Carlos Ruiz Zafon • Many folks think they aren’t good at earning money, when what they don’t know is how to use it. – Frank A. Clark • Marrying into money was not a good thing for me. – Anna Nicole Smith • Men make counterfeit money; in many more cases, money makes counterfeit men. – Sydney J. Harris • Money and women are the most sought after and the least known about of any two things we have. – Will Rogers • Money brings honor, friends, conquest, and realms. – John Milton • Money differs from an automobile or mistress in being equally important to those who have it and those who do not. – John Kenneth Galbraith • Money doesn’t make you happy. I now have $50 million but I was just as happy when I had $48 million. – Arnold Schwarzenegger • Money doesn’t talk, it swears. – Bob Dylan • Money frees you from doing things you dislike. Since I dislike doing nearly everything, money is handy. – Groucho Marx • Money has never made man happy, nor will it, there is nothing in its nature to produce happiness. The more of it one has the more one wants. – Benjamin Franklin • Money is a guarantee that we may have what we want in the future. Though we need nothing at the moment it insures the possibility of satisfying a new desire when it arises. – Aristotle • Money is a needful and precious thing – Louisa May Alcott • Money is always there but the pockets change; it is not in the same pockets after a change, and that is all there is to say about money. – Gertrude Stein • Money is just an idea. – Robert Kiyosaki • Money is like a sixth sense without which you cannot make a complete use of the other five. – W. Somerset Maugham • Money is like an arm or leg – use it or lose it. – Henry Ford • Money is like love; it kills slowly and painfully the one who withholds it, and enlivens the other who turns it on his fellow man. – Khalil Gibran • Money is like manure, of very little use except it be spread. – Francis Bacon • Money is neither my god nor my devil. It is a form of energy that tends to make us more of who we already are, whether it’s greedy or loving. – Dan Millman • Money is not the most important thing in the world. Love is. Fortunately, I love money. – Jackie Mason • Money is not the only answer, but it makes a difference. – Barack Obama • Money is of a prolific generating nature. Money can beget money, and its offspring can beget more. – Benjamin Franklin • Money is only a tool. It will take you wherever you wish, but it will not replace you as the driver. – Ayn Rand • Money is our madness, our vast collective madness. – D. H. Lawrence • Money is power, freedom, a cushion, the root of all evil, the sum of blessings. – Carl Sandburg • Money is the barometer of a society’s virtue. – Ayn Rand • Money is the seed of money, and the first guinea is sometimes more difficult to acquire than the second million. – Jean-Jacques Rousseau • Money is the wise man’s religion. – Euripides • Money is to be sought for first of all; virtue after wealth. [Lat., Quaerenda pecunia primum est; virtus post nummos.] – Horace • Money is usually attracted, not pursued.- Jim Rohn • Money isn’t the most important thing in life, but it’s reasonably close to oxygen on the ‘gotta have it’ scale. – Zig Ziglar • Money makes up in a measure all other wants in men. – William Wycherley • Money may be the husk of many things but not the kernel. It brings you food, but not appetite; medicine, but not health; acquaintance, but not friends; servants, but not loyalty; days of joy, but not peace or happiness. – Henrik Ibsen • Money often costs too much. – Ralph Waldo Emerson • Money plays the largest part in determining the course of history. – Karl Marx • Money problems can always be solved by a man not frightened by them. – Robert A. Heinlein • Money should be used to help others. – Neem Karoli Baba • Money speaks sense in a language all nations understand. – Aphra Behn • Money speaks, but it speaks with a male voice. – Andrea Dworkin • Money talks, bullshit walks. – Stephen King • Money was never a big motivation for me, except as a way to keep score. The real excitement is playing the game. – Donald Trump • Money will buy a pretty good dog, but it won’t buy the wag of his tail. – Josh Billings • Money without brains is always dangerous. – Napoleon Hill • Money, it turned out, was exactly like sex, you thought of nothing else if you didn’t have it and thought of other things if you did. – James A. Baldwin • Money, make money; by honest means if you can; if not, by any means make money. [Lat., Rem facias rem, Recte si possis, si non, quocumque modo rem.] – Horace • Money. . . those who don’t have enough of it are only aware of what it can buy them. When you finally have enough of it you become aware- acutely aware-of all the things it can’t buy … the really important things, like youth, health, love, peace of mind. – F. Paul Wilson • Money. It’s a good servant but a bad master. – Gretchen Rubin • Money’s a horrid thing to follow, but a charming thing to meet. – Henry James • My goal wasn’t to make a ton of money. It was to build good computers. – Steve Wozniak • Never begrudge the money you spend on your own education. – Jim Rohn • No matter how hard you hug your money, it never hugs back.- H. Jackson Brown, Jr. • No one would remember the Good Samaritan if he’d only had good intentions; he had money as well. – Margaret Thatcher • Nobody’s going to do your life for you. You have to do it yourself, whether you’re rich or poor, out of money or raking it in, the beneficiary of ridiculous fortune or terrible injustice. And you have to do it no matter what is true. No matter what is hard. No matter what unjust, sad, sucky things befall you. Self-pity is a dead-end road. You make the choice to drive down it. It’s up to you to decide to stay parked there or to turn around and drive out. – Cheryl Strayed • Nothing comes amiss, so money comes withal. – William Shakespeare • Nothing is so secure as that money will not defeat it. – Marcus Tullius Cicero • Of the billionaires I have known, money just brings out the basic traits in them. If they were jerks before they had money, they are simply jerks with a billion dollars. – Warren Buffett • People ask how can a Jewish kid from the Bronx do preppy clothes? Does it have to do with class and money? It has to do with dreams. – Ralph Lauren • People who say that money isn’t the most important thing in the world are usually broke. – Malcolm Forbes • Quality is free. It’s not a gift, but it’s free. The ‘unquality’ things are what cost money. – Phil Crosby • Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich. – Napoleon Bonaparte • Remember that credit is money. – Benjamin Franklin • Rule No.1: Never lose money. Rule No.2: Never forget rule No.1. – Warren Buffett • Simple, genuine goodness is the best capital to found the business of this life upon. It lasts when fame and money fail, and is the only riches we can take out of this world with us. – Louisa May Alcott • So you think that money is the root of all evil. Have you ever asked what is the root of all money? – Ayn Rand • Some people may complicate it for you, but the formula is simple: Love God more than anything else. More than your ego. More than your money. More than your desires…More than your sleep at dawn. Love God more than anything else, and submission comes natural. Love God more than anything else, and all goodness will follow. – Yasmin Mogahed • Success is having to worry about every damn thing in the world, except money. – Johnny Cash • Successful people make money. It’s not that people who make money become successful, but that successful people attract money. They bring success to what they do. – Wayne Dyer • That money talks, I’ll not deny, I heard it once: It said, ‘Goodbye’. – Richard Armour • The art of living easily as to money is to pitch your scale of living one degree below your means. – Henry Taylor • The chief value of money lies in the fact that one lives in a world in which it is overestimated. – H. L. Mencken • The circulation of confidence is better than the circulation of money. – James Madison • The easiest way for your children to learn about money is for you not to have any. – Katharine Whitehorn • The importance of money flows from it being a link between the present and the future. – John Maynard Keynes • The key to making money is to stay invested. – Suze Orman • The lack of money is the root of all evil. – Mark Twain • The only point in making money is, you can tell some big shot where to go. – Humphrey Bogart • The only way not to think about money is to have a great deal of it. – Edith Wharton • The price we have to pay for money is sometimes liberty. – Robert Louis Stevenson • The real measure of your wealth is how much you’d be worth if you lost all your money. – Bernard Meltzer • The safe way to double your money is to fold it over once and put it in your pocket. – Kin Hubbard • The study of money, above all other fields in economics, is one in which complexity is used to disguise truth or to evade truth, not to reveal it. The process by which banks create money is so simple the mind is repelled. – John Kenneth Galbraith • The universal regard for money is the one hopeful fact in our civilization. – George Bernard Shaw • There are few ways in which a man can be more innocently employed than in getting money. – Samuel Johnson • There are people who have money and people who are rich. – Coco Chanel • There is only one class in the community that thinks more about money than the rich, and that is the poor. The poor can think of nothing else. – Oscar Wilde • There’s only one thing money won’t buy, and that is poverty. – Joe E. Lewis • Time is more valuable than money. You can get more money, but you cannot get more time. – Jim Rohn • To be clever enough to get all that money, one must be stupid enough to want it. – Gilbert K. Chesterton • To give real service you must add something which cannot be bought or measured with money, and that is sincerity and integrity. – Douglas Adams • To have done anything just for money is to have been truly idle. – Henry David Thoreau • Too many of us look upon Americans as dollar chasers. This is a cruel libel, even if it is reiterated thoughtlessly by the Americans themselves. – Albert Einstein • Too many people spend money they haven’t earned to buy things they don’t want to impress people they don’t like. – Will Rogers • War has been good to me from a financial standpoint but I don’t want to make money that way. I don’t want blood money. – Ted Turner
• We all need money, but there are degrees of desperation. – Anthony Burgess • We ought to change the legend on our money from “In God We Trust” to “In Money We Trust.” Because, as a nation, we’ve got far more faith in money these days than we do in God. – Art Hoppe • We teach children to save their money. As an attempt to counteract thoughtless and selfish expenditure, that has value. But it is not positive; it does not lead the child into the safe and useful avenues of self-expression or self-expenditure. To teach a child to invest and use is better than to teach him to save. – Henry Ford • We’ve got to put a lot of money into changing behavior. – Bill Gates • What we really want to do is what we are really meant to do. When we do what we are meant to do, money comes to us, doors open for us, we feel useful, and the work we do feels like play to us. – Julia Cameron • What’s money? A man is a success if he gets up in the morning and goes to bed at night and in between does what he wants to do. – Bob Dylan • What’s worth doing is worth doing for money. – Michael Douglas • When I chased after money, I never had enough. When I got my life on purpose and focused on giving of myself and everything that arrived into my life, then I was prosperous. – Wayne Dyer • When I was young I thought that money was the most important thing in life; now that I am old I know that it is. – Oscar Wilde • When it comes to money, you can’t win. If you focus on making it, you’re materialistic. If you try to but don’t make any, you’re a loser. If you make a lot and keep it, you’re a miser. If you make it and spend it, you’re a spendthrift. If you don’t care about making it, you’re unambitious. If you make a lot and still have it when you die, you’re a fool-for trying to take it with you. The only way to really win with money is to hold it loosely-and be generous with it to accomplish things of value. – John C. Maxwell • When it is a question of money, everybody is of the same religion. – Voltaire • When men are so busy making money that they have no time for anything else, then the day is not far off when they will have no money for anything else. – William J. H. Boetcker • Whoever controls the volume of money in any country is absolute master of all industry and commerce. – James A. Garfield • Whoever said money can’t buy happiness didn’t know where to shop – Gertrude Stein • Whoever said money can’t buy happiness simply didn’t know where to go shopping. – Bo Derek • Why is there so much month left at the end of the money? – John Barrymore • You aren’t wealthy until you have something money can’t buy. – Garth Brooks • You can be young without money but you can’t be old without it. – Tennessee Williams • You can make money two ways – make more, or spend less. – John Hope Bryant • You have reached the pinnacle of success as soon as you become uninterested in money, compliments, or publicity. – Thomas Wolfe • You must gain control over your money or the lack of it will forever control you. – Dave Ramsey
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