Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Occur. 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 Occur Quotes And Sayings by 96 Authors including William Alexander,Professor Griff,John Cage,Upton Sinclair,Charlie Kaufman for you to enjoy and share.
One event is an anomaly, two is a coincidence, and three a pattern.
Revolution is not an event! It's a process
Each moment presents what happens.
An event of colossal and overwhelming significance may happen all at once, but the words which describe it have to come one by one in a long chain.
Every day of your life, you have information that enters your head, and that information informs your understanding of things, or shifts it, or changes it, or deepens it, or confuses you. Every day, every moment of every day - it's like this thing that happens.
Improbable things happen a lot.
Building an online community is not an event, it is an ongoing process.
Anything that happens, happens.
Anything that, in happening, causes something else to happen, causes something else to happen.
Anything that, in happening, causes itself to happen again, happens again.
It doesn't necessarily do it in chronological order, though.
PROBABILITY BY LIA PURPURA Most coincidents are not miraculous, but way more common than we think - it's the shiver of noticing being central in a sequence of events that makes so much seem wild and rare - because what if it wasn't? Astonishment's nothing without your consent.
occurred! Amy was shot! But then I realized
Then what happened next happened.
Nonintervention does not mean that nothing happens. It means that something else happens.
post-prandial hour. But oftener than not when these occasions occurred,
Shh! It happens. Sh!it happens.
One event makes another. What we anticipate seldom occurs; what we least expected generally happens; and time can only prove which is most for our advantage.
Everything is happening spontaneously, and the witnessing of it is also happening spontaneously. Everything is already happening in natural balance.
The events of one's life take place, take place. How often have I used this expression, and how often have I stopped to think about what it means? Events do indeed take place, they have meaning in relation to things around them.
Every day / a few billion histories fail to occur.
The "happening" operates by creating an asymmetrical network of surprises, without climax or consummation, this is the alogism of dreams rather than the logic of most art.
Coincidence is a factor in life not always sufficiently considered; and the events I have related can be explained in a perfectly natural manner, if one be inclined to do so.
The Story Is Not the Event
Random violence makes the news precisely because it is so rare, routine kindness does not make the news precisely because it is so commonplace. (104)
Events don't happen because I write a speech. I am allowed to write a speech because events are going to happen.
Like we had the event instead of just
Certain actions take place outside the normal course of things so unexpectedly that they seem to paralyse ordinary capacity for feeling surprise;
Things just happen. What the hell." The
Sometimes, unexpected things can happen.
operatic tragedy began.
You know when I say that things happen in matches? Well, it just happened there.
It seemed to happen in springs, the revealing of things.
It is a precisely datable historical event having the full weight that real historical happenings have; like them, too, it happens once only; it is contemporary with all times, but not in the way that a timeless myth would be.
I am the place in which something has occurred.
It is often interesting, in retrospect, to consider the trifling causes that lead to great events. A chance encounter, a thoughtless remark - and the tortuous chain reaction of coincidence is set in motion, leading with devious inevitability to some resounding climax.
Events do not just happen, but arrive by appointment.
How many things have to happen to you before something occurs to you?
Some events do take place but are not true; others are, although they never occurred.
What we anticipate seldom occurs: but what we least expect generally happens.
I intend to focus on the question of truth. That means I do not inquire about facticity-what happened-but what is
claimed, what is asserted here about reality.
Babies were born, old people died, stocks were traded, and someone faked an orgasm. All in those five seconds.
And what I know from my studies and from my life is that there is no such thing as a true event. We know dates and times and locations and participants but accounts of what happened depend upon the perspective from which the event is viewed.
Every day there was some new tragedy, some new and inexplicable failure of the ordinary.
Things are not as easily understood nor as expressible as people usually would like us to believe. Most happenings are beyond expression; they exist where a word has never intruded.
Happen to things, don't let things happen to you
Each drop hits the pavement;
A soft, incoherent shatter below.
Here I stand in torturous observance
Of this strange disappearing act.
MOST THINGS DON'T HAPPEN
Consult duty not events.
A crisis event often explodes the illusions that anchor our lives.
Catastrophes come when some dominant institution, swollen like a soap-bubble and still standing without foundations, suddenly crumbles at the touch of what may seem a word or idea, but is really some stronger material source.
It's an accident when cars collide." The remnants of desired hoarsened Walsh's voice. "When lips collide it's a kiss.
An event is a stretch of time, and time, according to physicists, is a continuous variable-an inexorable cosmic flow, in Newton's world, or a fourth dimension in a seamless hyperspace, in Einstein's. But the human mind carves this fabric into the discrete swatches we call events.
I'm interested in the way major events don't necessarily announce themselves as major events. They're often little things - the drip, drip of life that changes people or affects people.
Fortuitous circumstances constitute the moulds that shape the majority of human lives, and the hasty impress of an accident is too often regarded as the relentless decree of all ordaining fate.
A pseudo-event ... comes about because someone has planned it, planted, or incited it. Typically, it is not a train wreck or an earthquake, but an interview.
Something happens because something happens because something happens-- Jan Gehl
the Incident That Must Not Be Named
Events are like horses. Sometimes they run away. After they've run for a while, though, they'll start to walk again. Then there'll be a time to put everything together.
Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. Three times is enemy action
What we expect rarely occurs; what we don't expect is what happens.
Events of great consequence often spring from trifling circumstances.
And now the sequence of events in no particular order.
All events are but the consummation of preceding causes, clearly seen but not distinctly apprehended.
All of the very important events in my life happen by chance.
Life happens at intersections.
A shocking occurrence ceases to be shocking when it occurs daily.
This field of activity generated a vast literature of carefully assembled one-line omens on this pattern: If A happened, B will happen. Here the sought-for outcome B, known as the apodosis, is deemed to be the consequence of an observed phenomenon, the protasis A. One
Random events often look like nonrandom events, and in interpreting human affairs we must take care not to confuse the two.
Off...pfff... it just fucking happen... it happen for god sake... it just happen...
our day-to-day life is bombarded with fortuities or, to be more precise, with the accidental meetings of people and events we call coincidences. "co-incidence" means that two events unexpectedly happen at the same time.
Anything that happens all at once is just as likely to unhappen all at once, you know?
Things don't just happen. They are made to happen.
Every cause that has not yet produced its effect is an event that has not yet come to completion. It is an imbalance of energy that is in the process of becoming balanced.
I know from my studies and from my life is that there is no such thing as a true event. We know dates and times and locations and participants but accounts of what happened depend upon the perspective from which the event is viewed. Take
Death is what makes life an event.
accidents, like women, allude
AMISSION (AMI'SSION) n.s.[amissio, Lat.]Loss.
Fatherlessness didn't strike me as being an event. It was a state of life.
But epidemics create a kind of history from below: they can be world-changing, but the participants are almost inevitably ordinary folk, following their established routines, not thinking for a second about how their actions will be recorded for posterity.
The greatest events- they are not noisiest but our stillest hours. The world revolves, not around the inventors of new noises, but around the inventors of new values; it revolves inaudibly.
There are occasions and causes, why and wherefore in all things.
An unlikely event is likely to happen because there are so many unlikely events that could happen.
But in life, a tragedy is not one long scream. It includes everything that led up to it. Hour after trivial hour, day after day, year after year, and then the sudden moment: the knife stab, the shell burst, the plummet of the car from a bridge.
The expected always happens
I've never really done anything to create what has happened. It creates itself. I'm here because it happened. But I didn't do anything to make it happen apart from saying 'Yes'
Events of all sorts creep or fly exactly as God pleases.
Life is so constructed that an event does not, cannot, will not, match the expectation.
It just happened,
Events are called inevitable only after they have occurred.
Paradoxically, it is the uncommon event that may best demonstrate the common predicament of our race.
The act is judged of by the event.
Things may happen around you, and things may happen to you, but the only things that really count are the things that happen in you.
Some events mark us so deeply that they find more force of presence in their aftermath than in their occurrence.
All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred.
Five wild Event Maelstroms swirled in vicious storms of unreason and spewed up a pavement.
Every action has a reaction.
Anything that happens to you has some bearing upon what you write.
Something is always happening somewhere.
Excrement happens.
Things happen to you they happen. They dont ask first. They dont require your permission.
There has been much tragedy in my life; at least half of it actually happened.
So even the most unlikely events have to take place somewhere ...