Not every field is worth digging. Preserve your energy and time for worthwhile missions.
“Not every field is worth digging. Preserve your energy and time for worthwhile missions.”
— Mitta Xinindlu · Time
The World Motivation
Not every field is worth digging. Preserve your energy and time for worthwhile missions.
“Not every field is worth digging. Preserve your energy and time for worthwhile missions.”
— Mitta Xinindlu · Time
Explore more quotes by Mitta Xinindlu on topics like Time, wisdom, and life lessons.
“Not every field is worth digging. Preserve your energy and time for worthwhile missions.”
“Sarah Baartman came from being the number one Body Mockery to being the Number One Body Influencer in the whole world. She's a majestic goddess.”
“Have patience with your life. Eventually you will smile too.”
“Time is the mother of everything. It will tell.”
“Clap for your wins, no one is obligated to do it on your behalf.”
“The lesson is that if people don’t understand you today, don’t change who you are. Just give them more time.”
“How many summers had I been alive? The obvious answer was as many summers as my age; but for some reason I felt the presence of another number, a different, realer number somewhere out there in the world. I thought about this as I gazed into the summer glare.”
“As I went back to the party the sadness of all the forgetting stung me. Even already, I thought, time is at work; time is ticking her away; time is destroying her, killing all there was between us. And with time on my side I would look back on the day without bitterness and without emotion. I would remember it only as a flash on the brittle surface of nothing, as a day that was rather funny, as the day we got drunk on cake.”
“Time can play all sorts of tricks on you. In the blink of an eye, babies appear in carriages, coffins disappear into the ground, wars are won and lost, and children transform, like butterflies, into adults. That's what happened to me. Once upon a time, I was a boy named Hugo Cabret, and I desperately believed that a broken automaton would save my life. Now that my cocoon has fallen away and I have emerged as a magician named Professor Alcofrisbas, I can look back and see that I was right. The automaton my father discovered did save me. But now I have built a new automaton. I spent countless hours designing it. I made every gear myself, carefully cut every brass disk, and fashioned every bt of machinery with my own hands. When you wind it up, it can do something I'm sure no other automaton in the world can do. It can tel you the incredible story of Georges Melies, his wife, their goddaughter, and a beloved clock maker whose son grew up to be a magician. The complicated machinery inside my automaton can produce one-hundred and fifty-eight different pictures, and it can wrote, letter, by letter, an entire book, twenty-six thousand one hundred and fifty-nine words. These words.”