Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Mingle. 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 Mingle Quotes And Sayings by 95 Authors including Katherine Mcintyre,Craig Stone,James Maxey,Robert Breault,Emo Philips for you to enjoy and share.
Fine, fine, I'll indulge in this 'socializing' thing you always rave about.
Ask questions then talk over answers, shout loudly you love everyone, try and hug people, confide in them that you are a sheep, offer them the last grass in your pockets.
Then watch with a smile as they pretend you aren't there, and whisper you must be crazy, because you want to make friends.
Sometimes, when we feel the greatest need to be alone, it's the moment we should most welcome the company of others.
Ah, yes, my social life - a series of encounters where we briefly debate who is in the greater rush.
I don't really hang out with people. I like to be by myself. In fact, I've been arrested a few times because I like to walk around at two or three in the morning, looking at shop windows. The cops take me to the station and fingerprint me. But I wouldn't call that hanging out.
There are those moments when you shake someone's hand, have a conversation with someone, and suddenly your all bound together because you share your humanity in one simple moment.
It is sometimes necessary for each person. Fill up with delicious food, get drunk, sing loudly and chat frivolously.
Surrounding yourself with others ...
Everyone has this sense of togetherness right now. For example, one guy on the subway today, he wanted to share my pants.
You know, you try to be diverse, and try to have fun and round things out.
Around my own friends, I like to mess around.
If there's one thing I'm good at, it's gathering people together to do something fun.
We are all so much together, but we are all dying of loneliness.
I don't like to socialise much.
I'm out there talking to everyone. My days are filled with breakfast, lunches, dinner and drinks.
In real life I avoid all parties altogether, but on paper I can mingle with the best of them.
What is a gathering without unseemly drunkenness?
The average person is gregarious; there is something in the spirit of the crowd that adds to the enjoyment of entertainment.
See Social-life and Glee sit down,
All joyous and unthinking,
Till, quite transmugrified, they're grown
Debauchery and Drinking
Share our similarities, celebrate our differences.
Everybody is continuously connected to everybody else on Twitter, on Facebook, on Instagram, on Reddit, e-mailing, texting, faster and faster, with the flood of information jeopardizing meaning. Everybody's talking at once in a hypnotic, hyper din: the cocktail party from hell.
People meet when they need to meet. I have just saved myself from myself.
I am one powerful self made up of so many selves that sometimes I throw myself a get-acquainted party.
Solitary pleasures will always exist, but for most human beings, the most pleasurable activities almost always involve sharing something: music, food, liquor, drugs, gossip, drama, beds.
Good company, lively conversation, and the endearments of friendship fill the mind with great pleasure.
Meeting each other and leaving each other. Leaving and meeting. That's what life is!
Wine always inspires sociability.
I'm with a crowd but oh so alone.
Connect and communicate!
I meet everybody. If somebody invites me to their house and they got a drum set close, I'm going to play, man. Let's jam. I don't care. Get in where you fit in and enjoy the experience.
Like great teams in sports and business endeavors, if there's a chemistry among the participants, and they truly enjoy fellowship together, everybody wants to be there, stay involved, and just have fun together.
What I need... is a strong drink and a peer group.
Beware of those that seek constant crowds. they are nothing alone.
I loved being around live rocking music, but I never knew what to do with myself socially at a show or club. I discovered that the dance floor was the perfect place to hide in plain sight.
I'm making friends. You wouldn't know anything about that.
I'm social but there's a limit
Neither of us fit in, so instead we fit together.
With my hours, I don't hang out with anybody. I work and come home to my Upper West Side apartment.
My peers, lately, have found companionship through means of intoxication
it makes them sociable.
I, however, cannot force myself to
use drugs to cheat on my loneliness
it is all that I have
and when the drugs and alcohol dissipate, will be all that my peers have as well.
I began to invent something new: a way to hang together without pretending I was whole
What should young people do with their lives today? Many things, obviously. But the most daring thing is to create stable communities in which the terrible disease of loneliness can be cured.
Join with those who sing, tell stories, talk pleasure in life, and have joy in their eyes, because joy is contagious, and can prevent others from becoming paralysed by depression, loneliness and difficulties.
There is no human reason to be here, except for the sheer ecstasy of being crowded together.
Fill each other's cup but drink not from one cup.
I want to hang out with my friends. I want to hang out with my family - well, I sometimes want to hang out with my family!
Nothing in the world is single, All things by a law divine, In one spirit meet and mingle-Why not I with thine?
Jack Kennedy always said to me, Hedy, get involved. That's the secret of life. Try everything. Join everything. Meet everybody.
People like you and me are quite lonely really but we still have each other, we have the secret satisfaction of being different, of rebelling, of desiring the unusual.
Our social relationships are limited, most of the time, to gossip and criticizing people's behavior. This observation slowly pushed me to isolate from the so-called social life. My days pass by in solitude.
I am a stranger at a cocktail party.
Lets talk to one another instead of about one another.
Around the table reigned that noisy hilarity which usually prevails at such a time among people sufficiently free from the demands of social position not to feel the trammels of etiquette.
Can't you ... I don't know. Find a hobby or something?"
"Being charming is my hobby," said Adrian obstinately. "I'm the life of the party - even without drinking. I wasn't meant to be alone.
We must hang together, gentlemen ... else, we shall most assuredly hang separately.
I'm antisocial, they say. I don't mix. It's so strange. I'm very social indeed. It all depends on what you mean by social, doesn't it?
Our Lady of Cheribim Chit-Chat.
I'm not a person that socializes very well.
There is nothing like the camaraderie that one has with fellow drinkers. It is a club you never leave once you join. Well, willingly or easily.
Socializing is more positive than being alone, that's why meetings are so popular. People don't like being alone. That would be, however, an important skill to learn ...
Birds of a feather flock together
I'm trying to do of a certain attitude in life. I'm against separatism. I'm for everyone to gather. I'm for everyone lunatic to hang out together. I want to hear somebody else's bad night, not just mine.
Sometimes I don't have enough energy to be social. I need time alone to recover from the last time I went out.
Those who go along get along.-- Sam Snead
Be good and you will be lonely.
Meet people where they are at.
Stand out. Never fit in.
We take our bearings, daily, from others. To be sane is, to a great extent, to be sociable.
Humans are social animals. They cluster like bees.
Somewhere in the crowd was at least one potential friend who'd understand the fundamental value of goofing off.
Because if not, how boring would that be?
I don't really have a social life.
What is better than to sit at the end of the day and drink wine with friends, or substitutes for friends?
I don't describe myself as a sociable person now. I can be quite ... you know ... grumpy? Is that a word? I guess I can be a bit grumpy.
Meet people were they are at.
Sometimes, just sit down and have a cup of coffee with yourself. That can be a cool experience - of hanging out with yourself.
What do normal people do when they're together?
The human desire to experience union with others is rooted in the specific conditions of existence that characterize the human species and is one of the strongest motivators of human behavior.
OPPORTUNITIES TO build friendship and community don't always come at the most convenient times, but we have to grab them when we get the chance.
We're born alone and we die alone. So in between, let's spend time with people that make us feel good ... or at least put-out.
One of the difficulties in living the lifestyle I lead is that it is hard to get my friends in one place.
If we don't hang together, by Heavens we shall hang separately
...very lonely and, often, very unhappy, with the poignant misery that comes to lonely people who long to be social and cannot, somehow, step naturally and unselfconsciously into some friendly group
Cultivate solitude and quiet and a few sincere friends, rather than mob merriment, noise and thousands of nodding acquaintances.
We humans are not born alone; joining and being active in a club whose members share your passion for ideas and get your jokes is one of the great joys of life.
A craving for company can yield the surprising discovery that the companionship we yearn for is with ourselves.
Loners can play well with others-the right others,
mixed company" meant me. No one else seemed to mind that people were wandering around with their naughty bits out.
I always say that as church falls into demise, we still have the inclination to congregate whether by a night of music or a festival, or just sitting down to listen to some vinyl ...
The only answer in this life, to the loneliness we are all bound to feel, is community.
Mature people relate to each other without the need to merge.
I need eclectic people in my life.
I'm better off not socializing. I make a better impression if I'm not around.
A party, isn't party without an a entertainment!
Acquaintances are always abundant; friends are always scarce!
There are two categories of friendship: those in which people enliven one another and those in which people must be enlivened to be with one another. In the first category one clears the decks to be together; in the second one looks for an empty space in the schedule. I
People are always so boring when they band together. You have to be alone to develop all the idiosyncrasies that make a person interesting.
We must all hang together or we shall most assuredly all hang separately.
They're sharing a drink called loneliness, but at least its better than drinking alone.
Friends, though absent, are still present.
But I always say, one's company, two's a crowd, and three's a party
Who can enjoy alone? Or all enjoying what contentment find?