Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Overreaction. 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 Overreaction Quotes And Sayings by 98 Authors including Janet Lane Walters,Thomas Fuller,Francois De La Rochefoucauld,Tui T. Sutherland,C.c. Hunter for you to enjoy and share.
accident." "He's over-protective. Being confined
Abused patience turns to fury.
Raillery is more insupportable than wrong; because we have a right to resent injuries, but are ridiculous in being angry at a jest.
I think they should rename the place Unnecessary Violent Overreaction. In
When we care about people, we sometimes overstep our grounds.
I overthink.
I overfeel.
I overlive.
I overdie.
Whatever you're not telling me, let it go. Emotion leads to poor decisions. Poor decisions lead to scrutiny. Scrutiny is our greatest threat.
I over analyze situations because Im scared of what may happen if I'm not prepared for it.
She went a little fucking overboard on her anger." He looks at me. "Her daughters are all a bit nuts, so you know exactly where they get it from."
"She called the fucking cops on me," I retort. "That's not nuts that's
"
"It's nuts," he rebuts.
"It's fucked up."
"That too," he says.
The main thing is, too many players feel like they're complete players when they're not, so rather than acknowledge their limitations and play within their ability, they overreach.
over? He's just going through a phrase.
Mindless action without a real understanding of the ramifications is only likely to result in serious miscalculations or a colossal waste of time. Avoid both by using your judgment, filtered through both knowledge and experience. Use common sense and logic as a counterbalance to emotion.
A common reaction to extreme events is to say they couldn't have been predicted
Don't be outraged, be outrageous.
It's the referee's job. It's not for me to have to say I should ease up.
A hasty judgment is a first step to recantation.
She was having an outburst with no advance warning.
You can spend minutes, hours, days, weeks, or even months over-analyzing a situation; trying to put the pieces together, justifying what could've, would've happened ... or you can just leave the pieces on the floor and move the fuck on.
Retaliation is a dog chasing its tail
You exaggerate your own reactions.
If you use the term 'over-exaggerate,' you know the definition neither of 'exaggerate' nor of 'over.
Don't be quick to get angry.
Ease up, the play is over.
If right now our emotional reaction to seeing a certain person or hearing certain news is to fly into a rage or to get despondent or something equally extreme, it's because we have been cultivating that particular habit for a very long time.
Much outcry, little outcome.
People react predictably, especially when they don't have time to think.
Sometimes people get angry and do things they shouldn't. Things they regret.
All right,' said Pooley, 'as panic is clearly ill-received hereabouts, what do we do?
You can only avoid responsibility for so long. The catalyst ended up being the law coming down and finally saying, 'You guys suspended judgement and that's fine, because we're not.'
Quick decisions made in anger, usually end in regret.
Excessive caution can sometimes lead one as far astray as rash enthusiasm.
Oversimplifying is the first grave mistake we make when confronted by complexity; overconfidence is the second. And there is a third: based on our overconfidence in our oversimplified conclusions, we overreact.
Those who jump to conclusions may go wrong.
There is a time to react and a time to accept
calm consideration was much better than rushing to desperate conclusions.
We have just witnessed a classic example of what I like to call 'misdirected rage'. I believe the technical term is being an ass.
Don't react to any fuming argument.
The country's gone mad...So much anger.
It was Orwellian. I completely disappeared, and disappeared the same day. It was by early that evening when the Times story ran. That was an overreaction. All human beings under pressure behave poorly.
What is the world coming to when you get a red card and get fined two weeks' wages for calling a grown man a wanker?
In response to the extraordinary
suppressed hysteria.
If someone is getting every decision wrong, that's when you need to act, and at that point it'll be painfully aware to everyone.
Anger made for hasty decisions and rash words that sometimes were hard to take back.
Surrender to the ridiculous
Sometimes all you can do is react (Kevin Freeman)
Do not plunge thyself too far in anger.
Emotion has its place, but it must not interfere with taking the appropriate action.
I am quite sure they are a little bit angry, they want revenge. I think they've wanted that since Monday morning. They look forward to the game, they've been waiting several days now so the players will react very well.
Anyway, as Hannibal Smith of the A Team said, overkill is underrated.
I worry too much.
People are going to be upset in life no matter what we do, Bexley. Might as well go big or go home. (Jude)
Turnabout is fair play. Payback is a bitch.
How could you get mad at someone who neither needed to attack nor was at all worried about being able to defend? It was like getting mad at Switzerland.
I think it was Lessing who once said, 'There are things which must cause you to lose your reason or you have none to lose'. An abnormal reaction to an abnormal situation is normal behaviour.
A bizarre hysteria, perhaps, that point which many reached here, when anger was all that mattered. It led to self-destruction.
There are two parts to reacting aren't there? How you feel and what you do. And its the thing you do that is the important one.
It is idle to adjudicate upon the right and wrong of incidents that have already happened. It is useful to understand them and, if possible, to learn a lesson from them for the future. It
Too excited to be genuinely happy
Many senior government officials, CIA, FBI, counter terrorism officials - when they look back at the decade, they effectively conclude that the United States overreacted after 9/11.
Don't waste your time obsessing over stupid actions of stupid people
An emotional response to a situation is the single greatest barrier to power, a mistake that will cost you a lot more than any temporary satisfaction you might gain by expressing your feelings.
We were reckless with the implications
and you goddamn well know it. I'm damn sure it was the right call; she's not getting dragged into this mess. No - no, it's done. I'm not interested in reevaluating the decision. I made my play, we're running with it.
It was the right thing to do, but it could not be sustained. Not here. The
What an extraordinary fuss there has been,' said the Dame de Doubtance raspingly, 'about that irresponsible Irishwoman and her improper child.
Reason leads to conclusions. Emotion leads to action.
A threatened nation can react to uncertain dangers solely through administrative channels, to the truly embarrassing situation of perhaps overreacting.
Sometimes we get very frustrated here on court. It is tough to control. It is a mistake.
When emotions are high, things are said, things are done. Ultimately, these players want to play. I know too many of them love the game too much.
We had to support our player and genuinely felt, like Rio has said, that it was an honest mistake. It is important to know that Manchester United never said, and Rio Ferdinand never said, that a mistake hadn't been made.
There's got to be something wrong with us. To do what we did.
When you're not sure your anger is justified, the thing to do is ask yourself exactly where it's coming from.
We were over-whelming underdogs.
Maybe he was overreacting ... Somehow you were meant to take responsibility, minute to minute, for deciding which events you would call manageable, now that none of them were.
Jumping to conclusions is efficient if the conclusions are likely to be correct and the costs of an occasional mistake acceptable. Jumping to conclusions is risky when the situation is unfamiliar, the stakes are high and there is no time to collect more information.
The discretion of a man makes him slow to anger. It is his glory to overlook an offense.
Outrage, combining as it does shock, anger, reproach, and helplessness, is perhaps the most unmanageable, the most demoralizing of all the emotions.
When things are going awry, it's time to put the blinders on and do your job. Just do your job. Don't worry about the other guy, don't worry about the wins and losses, just worry about what the very next play is.
Usually, I'm over-analyzing things that have to do with my own actions.
We overreached our decision power. Sometimes our decisions have to fit the reality of the outside world.
Some of the fans here were not too sure about their club signing a player from their biggest rivals. Fortunately, we had a great season and won the League title for the first time in four years. Now, I think, everyone can say it was good business.
Emotions generally led to irrational and stupid actions. In this game, they were likely to be fatal. He regained his composure and became logical, rational, disconnected.
I'm not a reactionary.
You have to be careful to react when you start to deviate from your course.
Complacency is a far more dangerous attitude than outrage.
Naomi Littlebear
I'm not over-reacting, but I do think people have to be a bit cautious when they say all kind of activities associated with witchcraft are harmless.
Don't get angry; get better.
Analysis paralysis occurs when you overthink and underwork.
It was like making a blunder at a party; there was nothing to do about it, it was dreadfully mortifying, but it showed a lack of sense to ascribe too much importance to it.
Let the worst come to the worst.
Control your anger, be calm.
If anything can be done, it can be overdone is my point of view.
Action is a great restorer and builder of confidence. Inaction is not only the result, but the cause, of fear. Perhaps the action you take will be successful; perhaps different action or adjustments will have to follow. But any action is better than no action at all.
All I can say is you don't know what's going to be on the front page of tomorrow's newspaper. So I take no joy in what happens to another sport, whether it's about a perfect game or an issue of conduct.
This was uncalled for.
Our players are mad, but it's good mad.
The world had gone too far in its enthusiasm for moderation and the thing had to be stopped
Excess always carries its own retribution.
How you react to the issue, IS the issue.