God is each truly and exalted thing, therefore the individual himself to the highest degree. But are not nature and the world individuals?
Why isn't it natural for people who have lived and worked at something to want to use the knowledge and capacity in a new way, free from the burden of making a living?
Whenever I get fed up with life I love to go wandering in nature.
I have stayed in south India all my life. English comes more naturally to me than Hindi.
Ayurveda is a sister philosophy to yoga. It is the science of life or longevity and it teaches about the power and the cycles of nature, as well as the elements.
Clever people seem not to feel the natural pleasure of bewilderment, and are always answering questions when the chief relish of a life is to go on asking them.
Naturalism teaches one of the most important things in this world. There is only this life, so live wonderfully and meaningfully.
Being inexhaustible, life and nature are a constant stimulus for a creative mind.
I don't mind gearing my life towards privacy. It's my nature.
I don't ever want to get too comfortable in my career or life. My nature is such that I'm always looking for new challenges.
My blogging life is basically goalless. I like the zen nature of that, and paradoxically, it improves results.
I think at its most mature, love is a very bourgeois state. There is something about luxuriating in the nest of love that people fall into naturally.
Married love between man and woman is bigger than oaths guarded by right of nature.
I love to laugh and dance. That's kind of my nature, though I end up always playing these angry, depressing characters.
I thoroughly enjoy the work I do in helping motivate and empower young girls to celebrate and love their natural selves.
There is perhaps no surer mark of folly, than to attempt to correct natural infirmities of those we love.
I always love watching those natural actors like Bill Cosby, Raven-Symone and Shia LaBeouf - just effortless actors.
I love seeing my mom and my daughter embrace their natural hair. I'm glad I've embraced it, too.
It is as natural to die as to be born; and to a little infant, perhaps, the one is as painful as the other.
I believe in God, only I call it nature.
Like nature, like life. The storm will pass. The night will end. Spring will come.