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Base words are uttered only by the baseAnd can for such at once be understood;But noble platitudes — ah, there's a caseWhere the most careful scrutiny is neededTo tell a voice that's genuinely goodFrom one that's base but merely has succeeded.

W.H. Auden , em Collected Poems
poetry writing meaning talent skill baseness embroidery platitudes

Of course, Mary Magdalene would have very little tolerance for the Christian platitudes and vapid optimism that seem to swirl around these kinds of tragic events. Those platitudes are tempting, but they're nothing but luxuries for people who've never had demons (or at least have never admitted to them). But equally, she would reject nihilism, or the idea that there is no real meaning in life or death - ideas present in so much of postmodernity. Those ideas, too, are luxuries, but they are for those who have never been freed from demons.

Nadia Bolz-Weber , em Pastrix: The Cranky, Beautiful Faith of a Sinner & Saint
faith loss grieving christian christianity jesus demons platitudes mary-magdalene

Pure wisdom is the 'fruit of life' banal platitudes are the 'bane of existence'.

Criss Jami , em Healology
life truth knowledge wisdom facts humor intelligence funny existence morality pop pop-culture popular-culture quotes experience originality ironic lesson dullness unique sayings clever contradictory quotations cliché witty funny-but-true fruit ripe pure aphorisms paradoxical platitudes banal bane overused trite unoriginality

The more things change, the more they stay the same. And, that's a whole other story.

Vivian Swift , em When Wanderers Cease to Roam: A Traveler's Journal of Staying Put
change platitudes

One of the most common platitudes we heard was that “words failed.” But words were not failing us at all. It was not true that there was no way to describe our experience. We had plenty of language to talk to each other about the horror of what was happening, and talk we did. If there was a communication problem it was that there were too many words; they were far too heavy and too specific to be inflicted upon others. If something was failing it was the functionality of routine, platitudinous language—the comforting clichés were now inapplicable and perfectly useless. We instinctively protected other people from the knowledge we possessed; we let them think that words failed, because we knew they didn’t want to be familiar with the vocabulary we used daily. We were sure they didn’t want to know what we did; we didn’t want to know it either.

Aleksandar Hemon , em The Book of My Lives
words clichés illness platitudes communication-problem words-failed

I should and can play better. That is going to be the challenge for me.

Andrew Strauss
goals challenges cricket platitudes

Those are just platitudes. Everyone has his own idea of "playing fair." "Does he? Try making up your own idea of what's fair--say, "giving the greatest rewards to the laziest workers"--and see how seriously people take you.

J. Budziszewski , em What We Can't Not Know: A Guide
morality fair fairness natural-law platitudes

In each generation, there is this certain wisdom of the ages that gets reburied in the fleeting drivels of modernity; then, like a diamond in the rough, it is yet again unearthed by a very small minority who not only restores it, but also polishes it and presents it as something new, something highly valuable and refreshing as understood by the current.

Criss Jami , em Healology
truth honesty wisdom time change classic fashion new lasting trend eternal modernity relevance tradition persona majority minority permanent generation special restoration progression presentation diamond burial fleeting platitudes refreshing current polish intergenerational intergenerational-relations gem burial-ground diamond-in-the-rough drivel unearth wisdom-of-the-ages

Leadership obeys the principle of Hooke's law to the very bone. It explains:When an elastic material is stretched, it returns to its original position. But when it's over stretched beyond its limit point, it loses its elasticity and becomes plastic, and later cuts or breaks.As a leader, in your leadership disposition, it behoves of you to acquaint yourself with this very leadership principle that edges forward. It's however, a human nature to adopt to an environment, so, leaders are humans, they tend to have this rapore with their followers which is somewhat a must needed. But the ability for such one to return and recollect to knowing his boundary makes a good leader. A phenomenon whereby he becomes drunk of platitudes, then it comes to a time where they (followers) dictate for him. And even sought and suggest plans without his consent or knowing, it has gotten to the point of plastic and break respectively.

Richmond Akhigbe
leadership phenomenon ability law material environment plastic principle position disposition platitudes followership boundary elastic stretched acquaint hooke hooke-s-law limit-point rapore

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