The best way to keep from stepping on other people’s toes is to put yourself in their shoes.
Some of the best arguments are spoiled by people who know what they are talking about.
The important thing is not how fast you are going, but where you are going.
It is always easier to hate something than it is to understand it.
We are not to see through people; we are to see them through.
Suffering in silence is sweet if everyone knows about it.
Horse sense keeps you from sowing wild oats.
Diplomacy is thinking twice before saying nothing.
We cannot really be for something we don’t understand.
The biggest step you can take is the one you take when you meet the other person halfway.
Instead of putting others in their place, try putting yourself in their place occasionally.
The man who has a true Christian spirit never takes delight in the faults of others.
We may not always see eye to eye, but we should walk hand in hand.
Smart is when you believe only half of what you hear–brilliant is when you know which half.
Sooner or later you must learn that God makes no deals.
Speed is not everything–direction counts.
No matter what scales we use, we can never know the weight of another person’s burdens.
Many complain of their money, few of their judgment.
In heaven, God will reveal what on earth He chose to conceal.
You must look into people as well as at them.
No one is always wrong–even the stopped clock is right twice a day.
When rejecting the ideas of another, make sure you reject only the idea and not the person.
You have heard of Murphy’s Law. I follow Morton’s Law–taking everything with a grain of salt.
Don’t pray for rain unless you are willing to up with a little mud.
It is better to see a few things vividly than to remember a lot of things vaguely.
Before you can dry another’s tears, you must learn to weep.
When God puts a tear in your eye, it’s because He wants to put a rainbow in your heart.