Knock the “t” off the “can’t”.
—George Reeves (American Actor)
Who never doubted, never half believed. Where doubt is, there truth is—it is her shadow.
—Philip James Bailey (English Poet)
A man’s most open actions have a secret side to them.
—Joseph Conrad (Polish-born British Novelist)
Journalism consists largely in saying “Lord James is dead” to people who never knew Lord James was alive.
—G. K. Chesterton (English Journalist)
Success in life is a matter not so much of talent or opportunity as of concentration and perseverance.
—Charles William Wendte (American Minister)
Every religion is true one way or another. It is true when understood metaphorically. But when it gets stuck in its own metaphors, interpreting them as facts, then you are in trouble.
—Joseph Campbell (American Author)
There is no intrinsic worth in money but what is alterable with the times, and whether a guinea goes for twenty pounds or for a shilling, it is the labor of the poor and not the high and low value that is set on gold or silver, which all the comforts of life must arise from.
—Bernard Mandeville (British Writer)
Television has proved that people will look at anything rather than each other.
—Ask Ann Landers (American Advice Columnist)
Courage is acting in spite of fear.
—Howard W. Hunter (American Mormon Religious Leader)
If a dog will not come to you after he has looked you in the face, you ought to go home and examine your conscience.
—Woodrow Wilson (American Head of State)
Thought is an infection. In the case of certain thoughts, it becomes an epidemic.
—Wallace Stevens (American Poet)
Markets change, tastes change, so the companies and the individuals who choose to compete in those markets must change.
—An Wang (Chinese-born American Engineer)
It is usually the imagination that is wounded first, rather than the heart; it being much more sensitive.
—Henry David Thoreau (American Philosopher)
Enjoy your own life without comparing it with that of another.
—Marquis De Condorcet (French Philosopher)
You’re mid-presentation. Your palms sweat, your heart drums, and you’re convinced the room can see every sign of it. They can’t. Your internal state is private. The version of you the audience sees is far steadier than the one you feel.
You launch passion projects with fervor, heart ablaze with possibility. Inevitably, that fire cools. Priorities shift, interests wander, life rearranges itself. The unfinished lingers, creating quiet unease.
Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) is a prime example. The concept appears sound: convert used cooking oil into jet fuel, cutting aviation emissions while recycling waste. Western governments have thrown enormous financial support behind this vision. The United States offers tax credits of up to US$1.85 per gallon under the Inflation Reduction Act. Europe has implemented comparable subsidies and binding mandates requiring SAF blending ratios rising from 2 percent in 2025 to 70 percent by 2050. The promise is seductive: transform yesterday’s fryer grease into guilt-free flight.
Some environmental harm is inseparable from human activity. Mining, manufacturing, agriculture, aviation all carry costs, and pretending otherwise doesn’t reduce them. The honest position isn’t that we should stop flying or abandon cleaner fuels. It’s that we should be clear about what our policies actually produce, not what they were designed to produce. A net-zero aviation target built on a feedstock that doesn’t exist in sufficient supply isn’t a plan.
A comfortable but unfulfilling job reads, to some, as surrender. 


It’s oddly compelling to learn that Jennifer Aniston ate the