Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Habits. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Habits Quotes And Sayings by 78 Authors including Peter Kreeft,Jack Black,John Irving,Ovid,Alejandra Diaz Mattoni for you to enjoy and share.
A habit is a stable disposition to act in a certain way, good or evil. Virtues are good habits; vices are bad habits.
Habit is the strongest thing in life.
Good habits are worth being fanatical about.
Pursuits become habits.
Experience tells me habits are stronger than love, fear, and necessity.
Yet habit - strange thing! what cannot habit accomplish?
Habit is second nature, or rather ... ten times nature.
It takes a habit to replace a habit.
Every grown-up man consists wholly of habits, although he is often unaware of it and even denies having any habits at all.
Habits are funny things. What's funny, or rather tragic, is that bad habits are so predictable and avoidable. Despite this, there are people by the millions who insist on acquiring habits that are bad, expensive, and create problems. The habit they weren't going to get, got them!
Habits are critical for players. They cannot think and play well at the same time.
Habit is habit, and not to be flung out of the window by any man, but coaxed down-stairs one step at a time.
Habit is the nursery of errors.
If I must be a slave to habit let me be a slave to good habits.
It was my interest in happiness that led me to the subject of habits, and of course, the study of habits is really the study of happiness. Habits are the invisible architecture of everyday life, and a significant element of happiness.
Habits and practice are very interrelated. What we practice will become a habit.
The power of habit is very strong.
Depending on what they are, our habits will either make us or break us. We become what we repeatedly do.
Habits are safer than rules; you don't have to watch them. And you don't have to keep them either. They keep you.
All habits gather by unseen degrees.
Habit! that skillful but slow arranger, which starts out by letting our spirit suffer for weeks in a temporary state, but that thespirit is after all happy to discover, for without habit and reduced to its own resources, the spirit would be unable to make any lodgings seem habitable.
Habit is overcome by habit.
Habits are like the wrinkles on a man's brow; if you will smooth out the one, I will smooth out the other.
Habits are more powerful than fears.
Habit: the body's memory.
Habits, Andrea, are concrete forms of rhythm, are that portion of rhythm which helps to keep us alive.
Habits die hard, only good ones, because bad ones are immortal.
Nothing is stronger than habit.
I don't like good habits. They strike me as being so easily broken.
Habit! that skilful but slow-moving arranger who begins by letting our minds suffer for weeks on end in temporary quarters, but whom our minds are none the less only too happy to discover at last, for without it, reduced to their own devices, they would be powerless to make any room seem habitable.
Habit is necessary to give power.
Habits grow like dragons if you feed them.
Habit keeps my life going, with occasional pushes from desire.
Habit, if wisely and skillfully formed, becomes truly a second nature; but unskillfully and unmethodically depicted, it will be as it were an ape of nature, which imitates nothing to the life, but only clumsily and awkwardly
Good habits are the key to all success. Bad habits are the unlocked door to failure.
Habits are malleable throughout your entire life.
Habit is the intersection of knowledge (what to do), skill (how to do), and desire (want to do).
Our habits are really our values in action.
This is the real power of habit: the insight that your habits are what you choose them to be.
We are, all of us, creatures of habit, and when the seeeming necessity for schooling ourselves in new ways ceases to exist, we fall naturally and easily into the manner and customs which long usage has implanted ineradicably within us.
Habit is a great deadener.
Habit, if not resisted, soon becomes necessity.
Habit is the denial of creativity and the negation of freedom; a self-imposed straitjacket of which the wearer is unaware.
With habits, we don't make decisions, we don't use self-control, we just do the thing we want ourselves to do - or that we don't want to do.
Habit is everything, even in love.
Habits are like submarines; they run silent and deep.
Habit is ten times nature.
Habit and imitation
there is nothing more perennial in us than these two. They are the source of all working, and all apprenticeship, of all practice, and all learning, in this world.
Understanding habituation requires grasping not only how we move from semblance of virtue to actual virtue by coming to act "for the right reasons" but also what constitute right reasons for acting.
Habits are formed by the repetition of particular acts. They are strengthened by an increase in the number of repeated acts. Habits are also weakened or broken, and contrary habits are formed by the repetition of contrary acts.
Habit is a cable; we weave a thread of it each day, and at last we cannot break it.
Habit is an energy saver for us. It allows us to free our mind for other types of activities.
Habit is the great flywheel of society.
Every habit is made of three parts ... a cue, a routine and a habit. Most people focus on the routine and behavior, but these cues and rewards are really the way you make something into a habit.
Habit is a good thing for the human race ... You have to spend so much energy just getting through the day when you have no habits that you don't have any left for productive labor.
Individuals have habits; groups have routines," wrote the academic Geoffrey Hodgson, who spent a career examining organizational patterns. "Routines are the organizational analogue of habits.
Habit is a compromise effected between the individual and his environment, or between the individual and his own organic eccentricities, the guarantee of a dull inviolability, the lightning-conductor of his existence.
Most of the choices we make each day may feel like the products of well-considered decision making, but they're not. They're habits.
Habit is, to weak minds, a species of moral predestination, from which they have no power to escape.
One habit: choosing a book and starting each day with a dedicated time of reading and gazing, becoming an apprentice to a mind I admire.
Habits are formed, not at one stroke, but gradually and insensibly; so that, unless vigilant care be employed, a great change may come over the character without our being conscious of any.
Perfection may be an impossible goal, but habits help us to do better. Making headway toward a good habit, doing better than before, saves us from facing the end of another year with the mournful wish, once again, that we'd done things differently.
habits emerge without our permission.
Dogs are a habit, I think.
Chains of habit are too light to be felt, until they are too heavy to be broken
Good habits were the easiest ones to break ...
Great habits sharpen our thoughts and make us great.
Good or bad, habits always deliver results.
Good habits, which bring our lower passions and appetites under automatic control, leave our natures free to explore the larger experiences of life. Too many of us divide and dissipate our energies in debating actions which should be taken for granted.
Habits are first cobwebs, then chains.
--Spanish proverb
Habit is stronger than desire.
Things start out as hopes and end up as habits.
Why are habits so important? They are, in essence, behavioral autopilot. They allow lots of good behaviors to happen without the Rider taking charge. Remember that the Rider's self-control is exhaustible, so it's a huge plus if some positive things can happen "free" on autopilot.
Old habits are hard to forget, and old fears are habits.
Virtually everything we do in life is a matter of habit. Habits make us who we are. Why not change your habits to better your life?
It takes a good habit to replace a bad habit.
Habits wear more constantly and with greatest force than reason, which, when we have most need of it, is seldom fairly consulted, and more rarely obeyed
Routines are unyielding. They take hold like lice.
A habit is good if it helps you achieve your goal; it is bad if it hinders your achievement.
Looking back at a repetition of empty days, one sees that monuments have sprung up. Habit is not mere subjugation, it is a tender tie: when one remembers habit it seems to have been happiness.
We are mere bundles of habits.
Habit is my true, my wedded wife.
Sayings remain meaningless until they are embodied in habits.
Habits don't change before or after we do them, they change when we are in them.
Some habits are harder to break than others
Nothing is more powerful than custom or habit.
New habits are things that you do, but old habits are things that you are.
When we try to form a new habit, we set an expectation for ourselves. Therefore, it's crucial to understand how we respond to expectations.
I dislike routine, but I am a creature of habit.
Habit rules the unreflecting herd.
Habit is a second nature which prevents us from knowing the first, of which it has neither the cruelties nor the enchantments.
Establishing good habits means that you use your willpower reserves for the truly important stuff.
Habit simplifies our movements, makes them accurate, and diminishes fatigue.
New habits can be launched.
Keeping a habit, in the smallest way, protects and strengthens it. I write every day, even if it's just a sentence, to keep my habit of daily writing strong.
Life is the sum of habits, only occasionally disturbed by a thought.
Good habits are as easy to form as bad ones.
The most important habit is solitude, quiet time. People who enter their day by taking 45 minutes or an hour for themselves - meditation, prayer, inspirational reading, taking a walk - before they go for it in the real world do best.
Little choices determine habit;
Habit carves and molds character
Which makes the big decisions.
Habit in most cases hardens and encrusts by taking away the keener edge of our sensations: but does it not in others quicken and refine, by giving a mechanical facility and by engrafting an acquired sense?