Be willing to be uncomfortable. Be comfortable being uncomfortable. It may get tough, but it's a small price to pay for living a dream.
Chinese economic development has cost many American workers their jobs. That's the price of progress.
I don't think anybody's really been successful with theorizing about value or creating a price theory.
Everyone isn't going to embrace your value, but that doesn't mean you need to go and change your price.
My ego thinks I would like to be considered for more heavyweight roles, but the price you pay for that is they are always the same kind of roles.
Labor is still, and ever will be, the inevitable price set upon everything which is valuable.
We live in a world of crisis, of challenge, and... it's in our galleries that we can unpack the civilizations that we're seeing the current manifestations of.
I would probably have been very content as a scholar to have carried on organising exhibitions and writing books and teaching.
Prices have stayed up because people in control of supply decided they could keep them up.
Everything worthwhile, everything of any value, has its price. Everything anyone has ever wanted has come neatly wrapped up in its penalties.
You can have anything in this world you want, if you want it badly enough and you're willing to pay the price.
We have seen a strong increase in oil prices and up to this year we see that the world has been able to absorb that.
I've paid the price; I definitely have a reputation that precedes me, and there is a camp that plots my demise. But then again... it's funner that way.
I behaved worse than anybody for 15 years, and you have to pay the price for that. I used to blame other people, then therapy made me realise I had to change.
Once you agree upon the price you and your family must pay for success, it enables you to ignore the minor hurts, the opponent's pressure, and the temporary failures.
Unwearied ceaseless effort is the price that must be paid for turning faith into a rich infallible experience.
Japan's experience suggests the importance of assessing the sustainability of price stability over a fairly long period, which many central banks have emphasized in recent years.
If you're using first-class land for biofuels, then you're competing with the growing of food. And so you're actually spiking food prices by moving energy production into agriculture.
When the commodities go up and the cost of transportation is going up, and the value of the dollar is going down, it's all going to translate to an 8 to 10 percent rise in food prices.
The price of freedom is eternal vigilance. Don't store unnecessary data, keep an eye on what's happening, and don't take unnecessary risks.
Cutting prices or putting things on sale is not sustainable business strategy. The other side of it is that you can't cut enough costs to save your way to prosperity.