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“If you see good circumstances around you, you tend to feel good and attract good things to you. If you see negative things around you, you tend to feel bad and likewise attract negative things to yourself.”
David Che, Total Law of Attraction: Unleash Your Secret Creative Power To Get What You Want!“Attract and get attracted to that which is your ultimate purpose.”
Debasish Mridha“The ultimate form of attraction is to be what you want to attract.”
Bryant McGill, Simple Reminders: Inspiration for Living Your Best Life“You sort of don't find me attractive? That can also mean you sort of do find me attractive.”
Colleen Hoover, Hopeless“What is attraction (akarshan) in this world? It is open fire and one should be aware of it. Attraction is the open fire. The root of illusory attachment (moha) is indeed attraction.”
Dada Bhagwan“It's really important that you feel good. Because this feeling good is what goes out as a signal into the universe and starts to attract more of itself to you. So the more you can feel good, the more you will attract the things that help you feel good and that will keep bringing you up higher and higher.”
Joe Vitale“to succeed at anything, you must want it very much. Desire must be in evidence in order to attract”
William Walker Atkinson, Thought Vibration or the Law of Attraction in the Thought World“Nature wishes that woman should attract man, yet she often cunningly moulds into her face a little sarcasm, which seems to say, 'Yes, I am willing to attract, but to attract a little better kind of a man than any I yet behold”
Ralph Waldo Emerson“I'd already sensed the attraction between us. it was apparent from the first time we met. But that sort of attraction was so usual that it didn't rate serious attention, let alone concern. When the attraction turned into something that smelled and tasted like substance, though, that was when things got complicated.A married woman will first deny to herself that anything improper is going on. She'll make excuses for her eagerness to see the man in question. She likes his sharp mind, for example, or his fresh views, or the stories he tells about his experiences, which are so different from her own. She'll dismiss as mere amusement her mind's tendency to wonder where he is and what he's doing, and whether he's thinking of her. She might even avoid the fellow for a day or two to test herself. If she doesn't see him and she feels fine about that, she'll know there's no cause for concern. The test is fake, though, too, because she's lying to herself to make sure she passes the test, which will then justify her choice to see him again, often.”
Therese Anne Fowler, Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald