Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Habitudes. 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 Habitudes Quotes And Sayings by 80 Authors including Thomas Carlyle,E.w. Kenyon,Samuel Beckett,Fiona Apple,Delbert L. Stapley for you to enjoy and share.
Habit is the deepest law of human nature
Habits are products of our choice; we are what we make of ourselves.
Habit is a great deadener.
Home is where my habits have a habitat
Good habits are developed in the workshops of our daily lives. It is not in the great moments of test and trial that character is built. That is only when it is displayed. The habits that direct our lives and form our character are fashioned in the often uneventful, commonplace routine of life.
Habit is a strong invisible prison.
Habit is my true, my wedded wife.
Yet habit - strange thing! what cannot habit accomplish?
Habit: The great economizer of energy.
To grow a habit is fun; to destroy it is matter of life and death
Habit is an energy saver for us. It allows us to free our mind for other types of activities.
Habits grow like dragons if you feed them.
Habit is, of all the plants of human growth, the one that has the least need of nutritious soil in order to live, and is the first to appear on the most seemingly barren rock.
Even the most fickle are faithful to a few bad habits.
Every grown-up man consists wholly of habits, although he is often unaware of it and even denies having any habits at all.
Life is but a collection of habits.
Habits are soon assumed; but when we strive to strip them off, 'tis being flayed alive.
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 a second nature.
Habit is the nursery of errors.
Habits are happiness of a sort ...
Habit is the great flywheel of society.
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 like submarines; they run silent and deep.
People are incredible creatures of habit.
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.
Habit is a powerful means of advancement, and the habit of eternal vigilance and diligence, rarely fails to bring a substantial reward.
Habit is second nature, or rather ... ten times nature.
Curious things, habits. People themselves never knew they had them.
Habits, Andrea, are concrete forms of rhythm, are that portion of rhythm which helps to keep us alive.
habits emerge without our permission.
Habits and customs are a convenience devised for the support of timid natures who dare not allow their souls free play.
Habits are first cobwebs, then cables.
Habits are the invisible architecture of everyday life.
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 with it's iron sinews, clasps us and leads us day by day.
Routines are unyielding. They take hold like lice.
Man is made of ordinary things, and habit is his nurse.
a chronic malcontent, albeit quite a purposeless one.
Habit is thus the enormous fly-wheel of society, its most precious conservative agent. It alone is what keeps us all within the bounds of ordinance.
Our habits are our friends. Even our bad habits.
Diary of a Country Priest
First we form habits, then they form us.
Habit had made the custom.
In this country, don't forget, a habit is no damn private hell. There's no solitary confinement outside of jail. A habit is hell for those you love. And in this country it's the worst kind of hell for those who love you.
Habit is second nature.
The real key to habits is decision making - or, more accurately, the lack of decision making
habit as the intersection of knowledge, skill, and desire.
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?
Habit is stronger than reason.
Habit is stronger than nature.
Habit is not unimportant.
Habit is ten times nature.
Bad habits: easy to develop and hard to live with. Good habits: hard to develop and easy to live with.
Habit is a second nature, and what was at first pleasure, is next necessity.
Bad habits fill needs, so find good alternatives for them.
Habit is heaven's gift to us:
a substitute for happiness.
Affection is a habit.
Habit keeps my life going, with occasional pushes from desire.
Habit converts luxurious enjoyments into dull and daily necessities.
Habit is the intersection of knowledge (what to do), skill (how to do), and desire (want to do).
Habit is overcome by habit.
[Lat., Consuetudo consuetudine vincitur.]
The fixity of a habit is generally in direct proportion to its absurdity.
They are that that talks of going
But never gets away.
Habits are like a cable. We weave a strand of it every day and soon it cannot be broken.
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.
Some habits, in other words, matter more than others in remaking businesses and lives. These are "keystone habits," and they can influence how people work, eat, play, live, spend, and communicate.
I really enjoy what I do, and who I'm with and where I am. Having said that, I'm not really a person of habit, because what I do in my job is travel around the world and play concerts to people, and occasionally do very weird things.
I'm a compulsive everything.
Habit is a cable; we weave a thread of it each day, and at last we cannot break it.
Pursuits become habits.
[Lat., Abeunt studia in mores.]
Every habit and faculty is preserved and increased by correspondent actions, as the habit of walking, by walking; of running, by running.
Habit, if not resisted, soon becomes necessity.
Habit creates the appearance of justice; progress has no greater enemy than habit.
There is nothing so habit-forming as money.
Habits, if not resisted, soon become necessity.
All habits gather by unseen degrees.
Lust indulged became habit, and habit unresisted became necessity.
...and lovers of romance novels and dissident rebels and brothers in Christ and druids and shamans and aphrodisiac vendors and scriveners and purveyors of real fake passports and gun-runners and porters and bric-a-brac trades and mining prospectors short on liquid assets and Siamese twins...
Habits are first cobwebs, then chains.
--Spanish proverb
a cocktail of characteristics that I found addictive,
Were it not for habit, life would seem delightful to beings constantly under threat of dying, in other words to all humankind.
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.
Habits are a function of your subconscious mind.
Habits are malleable throughout your entire life.
My actions are ruled by appetite, passion, prejudice, greed, love, fear, environment, habit, and the worst of these tyrants is habit.
Habit is the ballast that chains the dog to his vomit.
Nothing in life is more corroding than habit.
In front of us, to the right, is the store where we order dresses. Some people call them habits, a good word for them. Habits are hard to break.
I don't like good habits. They strike me as being so easily broken.
Habit is either the best of servants or the worst of masters. - NATHANIEL EMMONS
New habits can be launched.
I'm a troglodyte. I think that's the word for it. Like an old school weird person who throws bricks at their computers.
Life is the sum of habits, only occasionally disturbed by a thought.
Habits are like the wrinkles on a man's brow; if you will smooth out the one, I will smooth out the other.
I am very much a creature of habit, and I have no life consistency. None.
Habits are familiar and comfortable, putting our reactions on autopilot and often leading us, instead, to great discomfort.
Habit rules the unreflecting herd.
Habit is overcome by habit.
See, a good habit makes a child a man, Whereas a bad one makes a man a beast.
Our habits are really our values in action.