Quotes about Expectations
Expectations destroy our peace of mind. They are future disappointments, planned out in advance.
— Elizabeth George
Luckily, I don't have to be anybody but Yolanda, because people don't expect me to be anything other than who I am. For an artist, it's a great place to be.
— Yolanda Adams
Oh that. Men do fall in love with me. They seem to think me a creature with volcanic passions; I'm sure I don't know why. All the volcanic women I know are plain little creatures with sandy hair. I don't consider human volcanoes respectable. And I'm so tired of the subject. Our house is always full of women in love with my husband and men in love with me. We encourage it because it's pleasant to have company.
— George Bernard Shaw
Getting over an unfavorable impression is ever so much easier than living up to an ideal.
— George Bernard Shaw
whatever else remained the same, the light had changed, and you cannot find the pearly dawn at noonday. The fact is unalterable, that a fellow-mortal with whose nature you are acquainted solely through the brief entrances and exits of a few imaginative weeks called courtship, may, when seen in the continuity of married companionship, be disclosed as something better or worse than what you have preconceived, but will certainly not appear altogether the same.
— George Eliot
It had never occurred to him that he should live in any other than what he would have called an ordinary way, with green glasses for hock, and excellent waiting at table. In warming himself at French social theories he had brought away no smell of scorching. We may handle even extreme opinions with impunity while our furniture, our dinner-giving, and preference for armorial bearings in our own ease, link us indissolubly with the established order.
— George Eliot
Mrs. Davilow have willingly let fall a hint of the aerial castle-building which she had
— George Eliot
Women were expected to have weak opinions; but the great safeguard of society and of domestic life was, that opinions were not acted on.
— George Eliot
In marriage, the certainty, 'She will never love me much,' is easier to bear than the fear, 'I shall love her no more.
— George Eliot
I was nervous before races. Every race was not perfect... Every morning when I woke up the first words weren't always, 'Oh, I'm so excited.'
— Caeleb Dressel
I had three rules for my players: No profanity. Don't criticize a teammate. Never be late.
— John Wooden
The slaveholders are terrible for promising to give you this or that, or such and such a privilege, if you will do thus and so, and when the time of fulfillment comes, and one claims the promise, they, forsooth, recollect nothing of the kind; and you are, like as not, taunted with being a liar.
— Sojourner Truth