Code Of The Wolf Quotes

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Never violate a woman, nor harm a child. Do not lie, cheat or steal. These things are for lesser men. Protect the weak against the evil strong. And never allow thoughts of gain to lead you into the persuit of evil.
David Gemmell (White Wolf (The Drenai Saga, #10))
Why are you talking to the King Loser Dork? You want to talk about ugly? Look at what he’s wearing. (Stone) I like a man who takes fashion chances. It’s the mark of someone who lives by his own code. A rebel. A real lone wolf is a lot sexier than a pack animal who follows orders and can’t have an opinion unless someone else gives it to him. (Nekoda)
Sherrilyn Kenyon (Infinity (Chronicles of Nick, #1))
Most kids don't believe in fairy tales very long. Once they hit six or seven they put away "Cinderella" and her shoe fetish, "The Three Little Pigs" with their violation of building codes, "Miss Muffet" and her well-shaped tuffet—all forgotten or discounted. And maybe that's the way it has to be. To survive in the world, you have to give up the fantasies, the make-believe. The only trouble is that it's not all make-believe. Some parts of the fairy tales are all too real, all too true. There might not be a Red Riding Hood, but there is a Big Bad Wolf. No Snow White, but definitely an Evil Queen. No obnoxiously cute blond tots, but a child-eating witch… yeah. Oh yeah.
Rob Thurman (Nightlife (Cal Leandros, #1))
Your body is made of the same elements that lionesses are built from. Three quarters of you is the same kind of water that beats rocks to rubble, wears stones away. Your DNA translates into the same twenty amino acids that wolf genes code for. When you look in the mirror and feel weak, remember, the air you breathe in fuels forest fires capable of destroying everything they touch. On the days you feel ugly, remember: diamonds are only carbon. You are so much more.
Curtis Ballard
Where other people will see obstacles, even blank walls, you'll soon start to see pathways you can use to get where you want to go. It's awesome.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Vladimir Nabokov, in his Lectures on Literature (1980), saw it all: Literature was not born the day when a boy crying “wolf, wolf” came running out of the Neanderthal valley with a big gray wolf at his heels; literature was born on the day when a boy came crying “wolf, wolf” and there was no wolf behind him.
Stanislas Dehaene (Consciousness and the Brain: Deciphering How the Brain Codes Our Thoughts)
Literature was not born the day when a boy crying “wolf, wolf” came running out of the Neanderthal valley with a big gray wolf at his heels; literature was born on the day when a boy came crying “wolf, wolf” and there was no wolf behind him. Consciousness
Stanislas Dehaene (Consciousness and the Brain: Deciphering How the Brain Codes Our Thoughts)
which may very likely refer to the pineal gland. In Dr. Rick Strassman’s DMT: The Spirit Molecule, he states than the pineal gland “possesses a lens, cornea, and retina. It
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
They wear sunglasses indoors and mutter entertainingly bad code into their sleeves. Bat is flying to the ceremony hall. I repeat, we have Bat. The groom is, uninventively, Wolf.
Ali Hazelwood (Bride)
To the butterfly, it’s probably something more beautiful than we can imagine since they have fifteen different types of color receptors versus our meager three! The
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
The Führer was in need of some good news. In four months, Hitler had lost one eighth of his fighting men on the battlefields of North Africa and the eastern front. Fleets of bombers were tearing German cities and industries to shreds. Germany was now losing the underwater war: forty-seven U-boats were sunk in May, triple the number sunk in March, thanks to the code breakers’ pinpointing the “wolf pack.” Hitler blamed his military leaders. “He is absolutely sick of the generals,”24 Joseph Goebbels noted in his diary. “All generals lie. All generals are disloyal.
Ben Macintyre (Operation Mincemeat: How a Dead Man and a Bizarre Plan Fooled the Nazis and Assured an Allied Victory)
The code words will change with women's subconscious anxieties. But if women want out of an expensive belief system arranged to coerce us through these messages, we will read holy oil copy knowing that it is not about the product, but is an impressively accurate portrait of the hidden demons of our time.
Naomi Wolf (The Beauty Myth)
A common story had begun to circulate: One man telephones another and in the course of their conversation happens to ask, “How is Uncle Adolf?” Soon afterward the secret police appear at his door and insist that he prove that he really does have an Uncle Adolf and that the question was not in fact a coded reference to Hitler. Germans grew reluctant to stay in communal ski lodges, fearing they might talk in their sleep. They postponed surgeries because of the lip-loosening effects of anesthetic. Dreams reflected the ambient anxiety. One German dreamed that an SA man came to his home and opened the door to his oven, which then repeated every negative remark the household had made against the government. After experiencing life in Nazi Germany, Thomas Wolfe wrote, “Here was an entire nation … infested with the contagion of an ever-present fear. It was a kind of creeping paralysis which twisted and blighted all human relations.
Erik Larson (In the Garden of Beasts: Love, Terror, and an American Family in Hitler's Berlin)
Young Byron thundered on. “Is there not blood enough on your penal code, that more must be poured forth to ascend to Heaven and testify against you? … Will you erect a gibbet in every field and hang up men like scarecrows?” Gazing around at the sea of implacable faces, Chase was certain he knew the answer to that question.
S.K. Rizzolo (Blood for Blood (John Chase/Penelope Wolfe Regency Mysteries #2))
A foreboding grew on me; I sensed that if I did not reply, some tragedy would occur. At last I began weakly, “Anarchy …” “That is not governance, but the lack of it. I taught you that it precedes all governance. Now list the seven sorts.” “Attachment to the person of the monarch. Attachment to a bloodline or other sequence of succession. Attachment to the royal state. Attachment to a code legitimizing the governing state. Attachment to the law only. Attachment to a greater or lesser board of electors, as framers of the law. Attachment to an abstraction conceived as including the body of electors, other bodies giving rise to them, and numerous other elements, largely ideal.” “Tolerable. Of these, which is the earliest form, and which the highest?” “The development is in the order given, Master,” I said. “But I do not recall that you ever asked before which was highest.” Master Malrubius leaned forward, his eyes burning brighter than the coals of the fire. “Which is highest, Severian?
Gene Wolfe (Shadow & Claw (The Book of the New Sun, #1-2))
She lit a new cigarette off the butt of an old one, just like you’d see any ordinary B-girl do in any ordinary juke joint on any ordinary night of the week, except, when Jessica did it, she made it seem extraordinary, as exotic and exciting as watching a jeweler cutting diamonds or a gunsmith engraving steel. She wrapped her lips seductively around the filter tip and sucked rhythmically, making her cigarette darken and glow, darken and glow in a pattern that spelled out temptation in her seductive private code.
Gary K. Wolf (Who Censored Roger Rabbit? (Roger Rabbit, #1))
Men think about right and wrong, they have to debate it, discuss it, draw upon possibilities and statistics, laws and codes. Wolves have to know. They have to know in an instant, pure instinct, not thought, because they can never be wrong. If they're wrong, the ice they walk upon cracks, their lungs filled with cold water and crystals. If they're wrong, their brothers and sisters starve and their pups are shot as they run. If they're wrong, the rabid wolf comes back, and he always comes back, only this time they're sleeping, and they can't even put up a fight as he splits them apart.
Alice Hoffman (Second Nature)
Well, feminine, but not too feminine, then.” “Careful: In Hopkins v. Price-Waterhouse, Ms. Hopkins was denied a partnership because she needed to learn to ‘walk more femininely, talk more femininely, dress more femininely,’ and ‘wear makeup.’” “Maybe she didn’t deserve a partnership?” “She brought in the most business of any employee.” “Hmm. Well, maybe a little more feminine.” “Not so fast. Policewoman Nancy Fahdl was fired because she looked ‘too much like a lady.’” “All right, less feminine. I’ve wiped off my blusher.” “You can lose your job if you don’t wear makeup. See Tamini v. Howard Johnson Company, Inc.” “How about this, then, sort of…womanly?” “Sorry. You can lose your job if you dress like a woman. In Andre v. Bendix Corporation, it was ruled ‘inappropriate for a supervisor’ of women to dress like ‘a woman.’” “What am I supposed to do? Wear a sack?” “Well, the women in Buren v. City of East Chicago had to ‘dress to cover themselves from neck to toe’ because the men at work were ‘kind of nasty.’” “Won’t a dress code get me out of this?” “Don’t bet on it. In Diaz v. Coleman, a dress code of short skirts was set by an employer who allegedly sexually harassed his female employees because they complied with it.” It would be funny if it weren’t true. And when we see that British law has evolved a legal no-win situation very close to this one, a pattern begins to emerge.
Naomi Wolf (The Beauty Myth)
The English will never be forgiven for the talent for destruction they have always displayed when they get off their own island. English armies laid waste to the land they moved through. As if systematically, they performed every action proscribed by the codes of chivalry, and broke every one of the laws of war. The battles were nothing; it was what they did between the battles that left its mark. They robbed and raped for forty miles around the line of their march. They burned the crops in the fields, and the houses with the people inside them. They took bribes in coin and in kind and when they were encamped in a district they made the people pay for every day on which they were left unmolested. They killed priests
Hilary Mantel (Wolf Hall (Thomas Cromwell, #1))
That is what I want our young nascent readers to become: expert, flexible code switchers -- between print and digital mediums now and later between and among the multiple future communication mediums....I conceptualize the initial development of learning to think in each medium as largely separated into distinct domains in the first school years, until a point in time when the particular characteristics of the two mediums are each well developed and internalized. That is an essential point. I want the child to have parallel levels of fluency, if you will, in each medium, just as if he or she were similarly fluent in speaking Spanish and English. In this way the uniqueness of the cognitive processes honed by each medium would be there from the start.
Maryanne Wolf (Reader, Come Home: The Reading Brain in a Digital World)
Scientists nowadays point out that morality in fact has deep evolutionary roots pre-dating the appearance of humankind by millions of years. All social mammals, such as wolves, dolphins and monkeys, have ethical codes, adapted by evolution to promote group cooperation. For example, when wolf cubs play with one another, they have 'fair game' rules. If a cub bites too hard, or continues to bite an opponent that has rolled on his back and surrendered, the other cubs will stop playing with him. In chimpanzee bands dominant members are expected to respect the property rights of weaker members. If a junior female chimpanzee finds a banana, even the alpha male will usually avoid stealing it for himself. If he breaks this rule, he is likely to lose status. (page 118)
Yuval Noah Harari (21 Lessons for the 21st Century)
This means, a woman might think, that the law will treat her fairly in employment disputes if only she does her part, looks pretty, and dresses femininely. She would be dangerously wrong, though. Let’s look at an American working woman standing in front of her wardrobe, and imagine the disembodied voice of legal counsel advising her on each choice as she takes it out on its hanger. “Feminine, then,” she asks, “in reaction to the Craft decision?” “You’d be asking for it. In 1986, Mechelle Vinson filed a sex discrimination case in the District of Columbia against her employer, the Meritor Savings Bank, on the grounds that her boss had sexually harassed her, subjecting her to fondling, exposure, and rape. Vinson was young and ‘beautiful’ and carefully dressed. The district court ruled that her appearance counted against her: Testimony about her ‘provocative’ dress could be heard to decide whether her harassment was ‘welcome.’” “Did she dress provocatively?” “As her counsel put it in exasperation, ‘Mechelle Vinson wore clothes.’ Her beauty in her clothes was admitted as evidence to prove that she welcomed rape from her employer.” “Well, feminine, but not too feminine, then.” “Careful: In Hopkins v. Price-Waterhouse, Ms. Hopkins was denied a partnership because she needed to learn to ‘walk more femininely, talk more femininely, dress more femininely,’ and ‘wear makeup.’” “Maybe she didn’t deserve a partnership?” “She brought in the most business of any employee.” “Hmm. Well, maybe a little more feminine.” “Not so fast. Policewoman Nancy Fahdl was fired because she looked ‘too much like a lady.’” “All right, less feminine. I’ve wiped off my blusher.” “You can lose your job if you don’t wear makeup. See Tamini v. Howard Johnson Company, Inc.” “How about this, then, sort of…womanly?” “Sorry. You can lose your job if you dress like a woman. In Andre v. Bendix Corporation, it was ruled ‘inappropriate for a supervisor’ of women to dress like ‘a woman.’” “What am I supposed to do? Wear a sack?” “Well, the women in Buren v. City of East Chicago had to ‘dress to cover themselves from neck to toe’ because the men at work were ‘kind of nasty.’” “Won’t a dress code get me out of this?” “Don’t bet on it. In Diaz v. Coleman, a dress code of short skirts was set by an employer who allegedly sexually harassed his female employees because they complied with it.
Naomi Wolf (The Beauty Myth)
I knew both from personal experience and by the example of many of my comrades that fighting in a war has an irreparably destructive effect on almost any man. I knew also that the constant proximity of death, the sight of the killed, wounded, dying, hanged and shot, the great red flame in the icy air above blazing villages on a winter’s night, the carcass of a man’s horse and those auditory impressions - the alarm bell, shell explosions, the whistle of bullets, the desperate, unknown cries – none of this ever passes with impunity. I knew that the silent, almost unconscious memory of war haunts the majority of people who have gone through it, leaving something broken in them once and for all. I knew myself that the normal, human ideas regarding the value of life and the necessity for a basic moral code – not to kill, not to steal, not to rape, to show compassion – had been slowly reasserted within me after the war, but they had lost their former persuasiveness and had become merely a system of theoretical morality, with whose correctness and necessity I couldn’t, in principle, disagree. Those feelings that ought to have been inside me and that were a condition of the re-establishment of this code had been razed by war; they no longer existed, and there was nothing to take their place.
Gaito Gazdanov (Het fantoom van Alexander Wolf)
The Haight-Ashbury hippies had collectively decided that hygiene was a middle-class hang-up. So they determined to live without it. For example, baths and showers, while not actually banned, were frowned upon as retrograde. Wolfe was intrigued by these hippies who, he said, “sought nothing less than to sweep aside all codes and restraints of the past and start out from zero.”4 After a while their principled aversion to modern hygiene had consequences that were as unpleasant as they were unforeseen. Wolfe describes them thus: “At the Haight-Ashbury Free Clinic there were doctors who were treating diseases no living doctor had ever encountered before, diseases that had disappeared so long ago they had never even picked up Latin names, diseases such as the mange, the grunge, the itch, the twitch, the thrush, the scroff, the rot.”5 The itching and the manginess eventually began to vex the hippies, leading them individually to seek help from the local free clinics. Step by step, they had to rediscover for themselves the rudiments of modern hygiene. That rueful process of rediscovery is Wolfe’s Great Relearning. A Great Relearning is what has to happen whenever reformers go too far—whenever, in order to start over “from zero,” they jettison basic values, well-proven social practices, and plain common sense.
Christina Hoff Sommers (The War Against Boys: How Misguided Policies are Harming Our Young Men)
know anything about, and so far, the
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Along came Aldo Leopold. He was a U.S. Forest Service ranger who initially supported Pinchot’s use-oriented management of forests. A seasoned hunter, he had long believed that good game management required killing predators that preyed on deer. Then one afternoon, hunting with a friend on a mountain in New Mexico, he spied a mother wolf and her cubs, took aim, and shot them. “We reached the old wolf in time to watch a fierce green fire dying in her eyes,” Leopold wrote. “There was something new to me in those eyes—something known only to her and the mountain. I was young then, and full of trigger-itch. I thought that because fewer wolves meant more deer, no wolves would mean a hunter’s paradise. But after seeing the fierce green fire die, I sensed that neither the wolf nor the mountain agreed with such a view.” The wolf’s fierce green fire inspired Leopold to extend ethics beyond the boundaries of the human family to include the larger community of animals, plants, and even soil and water. He enshrined this natural code of conduct in his famous land ethic: “A thing is right when it tends to preserve the integrity, stability, and beauty of the biotic community. It is wrong when it tends otherwise.” Carol inscribed Leopold’s land ethic in her journal when she was a teenager and has steadfastly followed it throughout her life. She believes that it changes our role from conqueror of the earth to plain member and citizen of it. Leopold led the effort to create the first federally protected wilderness area: a half million acres of the Gila National Forest in New Mexico was designated as wilderness in 1924. Leopold had laid the groundwork for a national wilderness system, interconnected oases of biodiversity permanently protected from human development.
Will Harlan (Untamed: The Wildest Woman in America and the Fight for Cumberland Island)
The street was one of the seedier places in Juarez, a place where gringo tourists didn't usually show their faces. The tall American who was leaning against the bar was out of place, but as long as he didn't mind spending fifteen dollars for a bottle of beer, the bartender wasn't going to object to his presence. He was already on his third bottle, and Felicita had been sitting with him for
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Again, that didn't matter much to Eduardo. A substantial number of his customers were in that same business, which suited him fine, since that meant they could afford the ridiculous prices he had to charge just to stay afloat. He had seen more than a few of them having private conversations with John the gringo, and though he hadn't seen money change hands, he knew without a
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Tom gazed down at the tiny forms of Londoners clambering over the new city, laying cables, welding girders, marking out the shapes of streets and buildings on the bare deckplates. “But it’s got no wheels,” Wren pointed out. “I can see you don’t know what Mag-Lev stands for, my dear,” said Dr. Childermass. “It’s a code name, isn’t it?” asked Tom, who didn’t know, either. “Oh no,” Dr. Childermass said. “Mag-Lev is just a shorter way of saying Magnetic Levitation.” “It floats!” said Wolf, gazing down at the new city entranced. “Like a gigantic hovercraft …
Philip Reeve (A Darkling Plain (The Hungry City Chronicles, #4))
Ippiki Ookami (Ee-pee-kee Ohh-kah-me) Japan’s Lone Wolves Some years ago in Osaka, I was introduced to a young Japanese entrepreneur who had established a small chain of shops selling cowboy clothing and accessories imported from the American southwest. When we exchanged name cards, I was immensely amused to note that he had replaced his Japanese name with “Lone Wolf.” I asked the young man if that was in fact his name, and he assured me it was, and that he not only used it in his business contacts, but that his friends also called him “Lone Wolf.” I didn’t have to ask him why he had chosen this popular American term as his name. I knew that it was a total repudiation of all of the attitudes and customs making up the traditional Japanese way, and represented everything he wanted to be.
Boyé Lafayette de Mente (Japan's Cultural Code Words: Key Terms That Explain the Attitudes and Behavior of the Japanese)
Annette was a foodie before ‘foodie’ was code for ‘pretentious jackoff.
MaryJanice Davidson (A Wolf After My Own Heart (BeWere My Heart, #2))
Aelin’s lips curved in a hint of a smile. She blinked at Fenrys—three times. Fenrys blinked once in answer. A code. They’d made up some silent code to communicate when he’d been ordered to remain in his wolf form.
Sarah J. Maas (Kingdom of Ash (Throne of Glass, #7))
When Joey and I finally made our way downstairs in the morning, Elliot was long gone, but he’d left me a croissant on a plate on the counter, along with a note and his garage door opener. Catherine, There’s fruit in the refrigerator and groceries will be delivered at 2 p.m. I didn’t know what you like to have on hand, so I ordered some of everything. In the future, you can make a list. It was my mistake not asking for your requests. Please make yourself at home. I left you the remote to the garage. The alarm code is 052106.
Julia Wolf (P.S. You're Intolerable (The Harder They Fall, #3))
If you have been in the street in Paris or Rouen, and seen a mother pull her child by the hand, and say, “Stop that squalling, or I’ll fetch an Englishman,” you are inclined to believe that any accord between the countries is formal and transient. The English will never be forgiven for the talent for destruction they have always displayed when they get off their own island. English armies laid waste to the land they moved through. As if systematically, they performed every action proscribed by the codes of chivalry, and broke every one of the laws of war. The battles were nothing; it was what they did between the battles that left its mark. They robbed and raped for forty miles around the line of their march. They burned the crops in the fields, and the houses with the people inside them. They took bribes in coin and in kind and when they were encamped in a district they made the people pay for every day on which they were left unmolested. They killed priests and hung them up naked in the marketplaces. As if they were infidels, they ransacked the churches, packed the chalices in their baggage, fueled their cooking fires with precious books; they scattered relics and stripped altars. They found out the families of the dead and demanded that the living ransom them; if the living could not pay, they torched the corpses before their eyes, without ceremony, without a single prayer, disposing of the dead as one might the carcasses of diseased cattle.
Hilary Mantel (Wolf Hall (Thomas Cromwell, #1))
Fenrys’s head thrashed from side to side, his body bucking against invisible chains. Against an invisible oath. His dark eyes met Cairn’s. Blood began running from the wolf’s nostril. It’d kill him—to sever the oath. It would break his soul. His body would go soon after that. But Fenrys put one paw forward. His claws dug into the ground. Cairn’s face paled at that step. That impossible step. Fenrys’s eyes slid toward hers. Neither needed the silent code between them for the word she beheld in his gaze. The order and plea. Run. Cairn read the word, too. And he hissed, “Not with a shattered spine, she can’t,” before he brought the poker slamming down for Aelin’s back. With a roar, Fenrys leaped. And with it, he snapped the blood oath completely.
Sarah J. Maas (Kingdom of Ash (Throne of Glass, #7))
Crying is for the eyes as sorrow is for the heart. Both are natural cleansing processes. But you’ll more likely see a Christian crying than a Banker, because one has indoctrinated himself in the idea of being a sheep, while the other has educated himself into thinking like a wolf.
Daniel Marques (The 88 Secret Codes of the Power Elite: The Complete Truth about Making Money with the Law of Attraction and Creating Miracles in Life that is Being Hidden from You with Mind Programming)
The mandatory protocol for cockpit door opening in American airspace had been in place since the attacks on New York and Washington. One flight attendant blocked the aisle leading from the front of the passenger cabin, standing before the drawn privacy curtain. A second flight attendant was a backup, standing on the other side. The armored door to the flight deck could be opened only from the inside, or outside from a keypad. The code was changed for every flight, and was known only to the pilots. On U.S. domestic flights, a wire screen was unfurled and secured, sealing off the vestibule from the first-class cabin while the pilots moved about, one at a time, outside the cockpit. On an international flight aboard a twin-aisle jet like the Airbus 330, the guard post was a ten-foot-long vestibule in front of the flight deck door. On one side was a bathroom, on the other, a bar and coffee galley.
Dick Wolf (The Intercept (Jeremy Fisk, #1))
my grandfather is right, then death is only going to be a doorway from this world into Heaven. And if he's wrong, then it's simply going to be the end of my consciousness. I won't feel anything, I won't know that I'm dead, I will just come to an end.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
You don't agonize over it, you simply decide whether action needs to be taken, and then you act on that decision. That's something we spend incredible amounts of time and money trying to teach to our students, and here you come along with it already hardwired into your Cybernet.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
After they left, Emma returned to her Jasper-burger consumption with gusto. She’d asked Lisa once to find out the recipe for their seasoning mix, but Kevin wouldn’t give it up. Plus, as Lisa had pointed out, it wouldn’t do Emma any good to have it since she couldn’t cook worth a damn, anyway. “So about what I said before,” Sean said after he’d wolfed down his food, “about not wanting them to know we’ve had sex. It’s not that I’m trying to hide it, I just…” “Don’t want them to know.” “Yeah.” “That makes sense.” His face brightened. “Really?” “No.” “Damn.” He’d finished his beer, so he took a swig off the glass of water she’d requested with her meal. “Under normal circumstances, I’d want everybody to know we’re sleeping together. Trust me. I’d put a sign on my front lawn.” “But these aren’t normal circumstances.” “Not even in the ballpark. I have this bet with my brothers I’d last the whole month and I don’t want to listen to them gloat.” Of course he’d have a bet with his brothers. Such a guy thing to do. “But it’s more about the women.” “The women?” “In my family, I mean. Aunt Mary, especially. They might start thinking it’s more than it is. Getting ideas about us, if you know what I mean.” Emma ate her last French fry and pushed her plate away. “So we have to pretend we’re madly in love and engaged…while pretending we’re not having sex.” “Told you it complicates things.” “I’m going to need a color-coded chart to keep track of who thinks what.” He grinned and pulled his Sharpie out of his pocket. “I could make Sticky notes.” The man loved sticky notes. He stuck them on everything. A note on the front of the microwave complaining about the disappearance of the last bag of salt-and-vinegar chips. (Emma had discovered during a particularly rough self-pity party that any chips will do, even if they burn your tongue.) A note on the back of the toilet lid telling her she used girlie toilet paper, whatever that meant. He liked leaving them on the bathroom mirror, too. Stop cleaning my sneakers. I’m trying to break them in. Her personal favorite was If you buy that cheap beer because it’s on sale again, I’ll piss in your mulch pile. But sometimes they were sweet. Thank you for doing my laundry. And…You make really good grilled cheese sandwiches. That one had almost made her cry.
Shannon Stacey (Yours to Keep (Kowalski Family, #3))
In order to feel remorse, there had to be a gray area, some part of the situation that made you uncertain of your choices. Noah
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Young Byron thundered on. 'Is there not blood enough on your penal code, that more must be poured forth to ascend to Heaven and testify against you? … Will you erect a gibbet in every field and hang up men like scarecrows?' Gazing around at the sea of implacable faces, Chase was certain he knew the answer to that question.
S.K. Rizzolo (Blood for Blood (John Chase/Penelope Wolfe Regency Mysteries #2))
Slaves were considered by slave traders and slaveholders as chattel, pieces of personal or real property owned by individuals. Yet the willful killing of slaves was illegal. However, these crimes were rarely, if ever, prosecuted within the states because state legal codes provided exceptions that allowed slave owners to claim that the killing of the slave had been justified or accidental. Slave captains routinely ordered crew members to throw sick slaves overboard, almost as a matter of hygiene, to keep them from contaminating the cargo and, more
Cynthia Mestad Johnson (James DeWolf and the Rhode Island Slave Trade)
If you live among wolves you have to act like a Wolf” – Nikita Khrushchev
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Fenrys’s throat bobbed, as if trying to remember speech. Then he said hoarsely, “We needed more pockets.” He patted his own for emphasis. Aelin’s lips curved in a hint of a smile. She blinked at Fenrys—three times. Fenrys blinked once in answer. A code. They’d made up some silent code to communicate when he’d been ordered to remain in his wolf form.
Sarah J. Maas (Throne of Glass)
fully appreciate the following section, please take the time to watch the one-hour video Maxwell, The History of Electromagnetism—Documentary by The King.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Milankovitch
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Parting Tune: Please visit YouTube and pull up the video “Beginning | Chill Out Mix” on the Chilloutdeer channel.736 Sounds amazing in the car. Thank me later.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
following on YouTube: “This Truth May Scare You See This Before it is Deleted 2018-2019 EVENTS WORLD EARTH UNIVERSE” by Anonymous Official.662 I’ll conclude this section with one more tantalizing bit of trivia. In the 11th month of 1922, Howard
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Wouldn’t that be an even more amazing story, showcasing God’s incredible power and genius in allowing DNA molecules to form? To my point of view, if this was the case, the original
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Limar, Igor. “Carl G. Jung’s Synchronicity and Quantum Entanglement: Schrödinger’s Cat ‘Wanders’ Between Chromosomes.” NeuroQuantology 9, no. 2 (2011):
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Take a moment and pull up the song “Grandyzer” by Lifeblood. It’s such a beautiful song.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Star numbers are generated by the function S = 6n2 - 6n + 1 for any whole number n and gives the outputs S = 1, 13, 37, 73, 121 .... It can be readily seen that all these numbers result in
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
how you happened to discover this book and/or any 1111 occurrences you’ve experienced. I can be reached at the1111code@gmail.com, and if enough
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
A hole in a hole in a hole—Numberphile Around the World in a Tea Daze—Shpongle But what is a partial differential equation?—Grant Sanderson, who owns the 3Blue1Brown YouTube channel Closer to You—Kaisaku Fourier Series Animation (Square Wave)—Brek Martin Fourier Series Animation (Saw Wave)—Brek Martin Great Demo on Fibonacci Sequence Spirals in Nature—The Golden Ratio—Wise Wanderer gyroscope nutation—CGS How Earth Moves—vsauce I am a soul—Nibana
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Into the light—Oase der Ruhe
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
the mathematically curious reader, please search for a video on “greens function PDE” and you’ll see a sample of the level of difficulty in electrical engineering math at the graduate level.668
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
the major trumps of the tarot deck of symbolic cards.664 The Yosher (straightness, uprightness) provides a framework and procedure for achieving enlightenment. Let’s pause for a moment and make a few key observations. The Yosher has 10 spheres and 22 paths between them and represents a road map to human
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
During [extended time without food], the body doesn’t shut down, it ramps up,” Dr. Jason Fung, a nephrologist and author of The Obesity Code, told me. “Think about a hungry wolf versus a lion who just ate. Which one is more focused? The hungry wolf.
Michael Easter (The Comfort Crisis: Embrace Discomfort to Reclaim Your Wild, Happy, Healthy Self)
wonderful, short book titled What Is Life was written by physicist Erwin Schrodinger, and I strongly recommend the readers add this to their reading lists. It’s a very short but deeply inspiring read.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
in Chicago, at the Building Stage.689 Recommended video: “Into the light” by Oase der Ruhe. The Number of Light
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
convinced that mankind alone is causing climate change? Research the Milankovitch Cycle. Awesome stuff. A special thanks to Dr. David Porter, professor of Oceanography at Johns Hopkins University for opening my eyes to really big calculations to help me understand my home planet’s physical processes in a very deep way. One of the best classes I have ever taken. There you have it. We have 1.5 with 22 zeroes-to-the-right joules (or watt-seconds) of energy. The
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
That’s 15 zettawatts. That just sounds completely badassed, doesn’t it? But the sun’s total output in all directions in space is a wiggy-wiggy-wicked 384.6 yottawatts, or 3.846 x 1026 watts equivalent to the energy hitting 25,470 Earths. The sun is incredibly productive.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Which wolf wins?” The old Cherokee simply replied, “The one you feed.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
even the finest examples of men and women are capable of horrific acts under the right circumstances,
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
A cat said goodbye by simply sticking its tail in the air and walking away.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
However, it is possible to be a genius and still be rather stupid,
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Contentedness comes from an awareness of security.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Genius is the ability to see past the limitations that most of us are faced with, and accomplish the impossible.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
and family to my endeavor. Give someone the gift of enlightenment. Parting Tune: Please visit YouTube and pull up the video “Beginning | Chill Out Mix” on the Chilloutdeer channel.736 Sounds amazing in the car. Thank me later.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
The famous theoretical physicist and pioneer in quantum mechanics, Werner Heisenberg, said it eloquently, “The first gulp from the glass of natural sciences will turn you into an atheist, but at the bottom of the glass God is waiting for you.”671 I would have to agree.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
scripture of the ancient religion of Zoroastrianism, which predates the Abrahamic religions, contains 22 prayers.661 For an excellent video on this subject, please look up the following on YouTube: “This Truth May Scare You See This Before it is Deleted 2018-2019 EVENTS WORLD EARTH UNIVERSE” by Anonymous Official.662 I’ll conclude this section with one more tantalizing bit of trivia. In the 11th month of 1922, Howard
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
I believe that the reason life exists is the result of infinite cosmic boredom.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
The largest living organism on the planet is not a whale or a redwood tree, but rather a mushroom—a honey fungus in Oregon that is 2.4 miles wide.673 I would offer that there is a very good chance these
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
PDEs are one of the highest levels of mathematics that I have ever studied, and Grant Sanderson, who owns the 3Blue1Brown YouTube channel, has a fascinating video which illustrates just how amazingly cool PDEs are.700 A common misconception about PDEs is
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Sometimes you have to look at the greater good, no matter what the consequences to yourself might be.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
At the start of this book, we asked what the world would be like if, instead of suckling Romulus and Remus, the wolf had eaten them. What if there had been no Rome? What if there had been only Barbarians? After the disappearance of the last Roman emperor from the West, a Barbarian empire came into being that seems to answer that question. The Eastern Goths, the Ostrogoths, whose parents and grandparents had raided with Attila and his Huns, moved back to Italy in 489, and this time they stayed there. They were no longer pagans, but as self-aware Goths they avoided the Roman Catholic Church. Like the Vandals and the Visigoths, they were Arians, and under their king Theodoric they set about building a new kind of Rome. In place of the old violent, intolerant and ruthless Roman Catholic empire, there was a gentler and more inclusive Barbarian vision. Whereas Rome tried to make all its citizens ‘Romans’, and tried not to recognize nations within the Empire, Theodoric believed that it was possible to build an empire of different nationalities. He set out to establish harmony between the different kingdoms and peoples of the West, intermarrying his relatives to different royal families and guaranteeing them their own law codes. He ruled both as a Gothic king and as a patrician, paying respectful homage to Constantinople, but never calling himself emperor.
Terry Jones (Terry Jones' Barbarians)
For a moment its eyes locked, frozen in panic, with Kan’s, the uneasy communion between predator and prey.
Chandler Brett (Wolf Code: A Sheltering Wilderness (Wolf Code, #1))
the smile was merely an affectation, that he had practiced it over and over until he could make it look genuine, but it still made her feel good. “Lieutenant Mathers, I appreciate that.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
One evening an old Cherokee Indian told his grandson about a battle that goes on inside people. He said, “My son, the battle is between two ‘wolves’ inside us all. One is Evil. It is anger, envy, jealousy, sorrow, regret, greed, arrogance, self-pity, guilt, resentment, inferiority, lies, false pride, superiority, and ego. The other is good. It is joy, peace, love, hope, serenity, humility, kindness, benevolence, empathy, generosity, truth, compassion and faith.” The grandson thought about it for a minute and then asked his grandfather: “Which wolf wins?” The old Cherokee simply replied, “The one you feed.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Alcohol stands out as the oddball in the composite picture within this section. Just from looking at the structure of the natural chemicals that the body produces, alcohol bears no resemblance to the body’s own chemicals and stands out as the intruder and impostor. It clearly is a foreign substance and bears no structural similarity to any of the chemicals the body produces to be happy. It is no secret that alcohol is classified as a depressant
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Just because you can do something that may benefit yourself doesn't necessarily make it right to do so.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Content?” Neil asked. “Wouldn't that be an emotional response?” Noah shook his head. “No. Contentedness comes from an awareness of security. As long as you're not in danger, and there's no immediate situation that threatens your security or causes you discomfort, then you should be content. And speaking of content, breakfast is ready.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Contentedness comes from an awareness of security. As long as you're not in danger, and there's no immediate situation that threatens your security or causes you discomfort, then you should be content. And speaking of content, breakfast is ready.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Golden Egg Pets · Golden Dragon · Golden Griffin · Golden Unicorn Diamond Egg Pets · Diamond Dragon · Diamond Griffin · Diamond Unicorn Common Pets · Bandicoot (Aussie Egg) · Buffalo (Cracked Egg or Pet Egg) · Cat (Starter Egg, Cracked Egg, or Pet Egg) · Chicken (Farm Egg) · Dog (Starter Egg, Cracked Egg, or Pet Egg) · Otter (Cracked Egg or Pet Egg) · Robin (Christmas Egg) Uncommon Pets · Black Panther (Jungle Egg) · Blue Dog (Blue Egg) · Capybara (Jungle Egg) · Chocolate Labrador (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Dingo (Aussie Egg) · Drake (Farm Egg) · Fennec Fox (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Meerkat (Safari Egg) · Pink Cat (Pink Egg) · Puma (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Silly Duck (Farm Egg) · Snow Cat (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Wild Boar (Safari Egg) · Wolf (Christmas Egg) Rare Pets · Australian Kelpie (Aussie Egg) · Beaver (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Brown Bear (Jungle Egg) · Bunny (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Cow (Farm Egg) · Elephant (Safari Egg) · Elf Shrew (Christmas Event: 23,000 Gingerbread) · Emu (Aussie Egg) · Hyena (Safari Egg) · Pig (Farm Egg) · Polar Bear (Christmas Egg) · Rabbit (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Rat (Lunar New Year Event 2020 - Rat Box - 14 in 15 Chance) · Reindeer (Christmas Egg) · Rhino (Jungle Egg) · Snow Puma (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Swan (Christmas Egg) Ultra-Rare Pets · Arctic Fox (Christmas Egg) · Bee (Coffee Shop - Honey: 199 Robux - 35 in 40 Chance) · Crocodile (Jungle Egg) · Elf Hedgehog (Christmas Event: eighty,500 Gingerbread) · Flamingo (Safari Egg) · Frog (Aussie Egg) · Horse (Pet Shop: 300 Robux) · Koala (Aussie Egg) · Lion (Safari Egg) · Llama (Farm Egg) · Panda (Lunar New Year Event - Game Pass: 249 Robux) · Penguin (Throw a Golden Goldfish (225 Robux) to a Penguin on the Ice Cream Parlor) · Platypus (Jungle Egg) · Red Panda (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Santa Dog (Christmas Event: 250 Robux) · Shiba Inu (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Sloth (Pet Shop: 199 Robux) · Turkey (Farm Egg) · Zombie Buffalo (Halloween Event) Legendary Pets · Arctic Reindeer (Christmas Egg) · Bat Dragon (Halloween Event 2019: a hundred and eighty,000 Candies) · Crow (Farm Egg) · Dragon (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg) · Evil Unicorn (Halloween Event 2019: 108,000 Candies) · Frost Dragon (Christmas Event 2019: 1,000 Robux) · Giraffe (Safari Egg) · Golden Penguin (Throw a Golden Goldfish (225 Robux) to a Penguin at the Ice Cream Parlor) · Golden Rat (Lunar New Year Event 2020 - Rat Box - 1 in 15 Chance) · Griffin (Gamepass or six hundred Robux) · Kangaroo (Aussie Egg) · King Bee (Coffee Shop - Honey: 199 Robux - 4 in 40 Chance) · Owl (Farm Egg) · Parrot (Jungle Egg) · Queen Bee (Coffee Shop - Honey: 199 Robux - 1 in 40 Chance) · Shadow Dragon (Halloween Event 2019: 1,000 Robux) · Turtle (Aussie Egg) · Unicorn (Cracked Egg, Pet Egg, or Royal Egg)
Bozz Kalaop (Roblox Adopt me, Arsenal, Boxing, Simulator full codes - Tips And Tricks)
The house seemed to be wired for Wi-Fi,
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
Never send a sheep to kill a wolf !
Bohdi Sanders (Men of the Code: Living as a Superior Man)
no matter how much we want to believe that our world is just and fair, it isn't. At least in some cases, the only way to have justice is to leave fairness at the door on the way in.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
If he was going to be in solitary confinement, he might as well play a little solitaire.
David Archer (Code Name Camelot (Noah Wolf, #1))
This term for donkey is used a total of ten times in chapter 22 of the book of Numbers.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Electric power in the United States and the rest of the Americas fluctuates from positive to negative polarity sixty times every second because the rotating magnetic fields in the power plant generators flip from north to south and back again sixty times per second, giving rise to the term alternating current.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Electricity takes all paths simultaneously, all the time, every time it’s applied to a circuit. Think of a bucket with two leaks—one large and one small.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
imagination, and spirituality, we have literally taught dirt how to think. Let that set in.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
baseball, a bit of trivia is in order. The longest baseball game in history spanned a total of 33 innings. The record-setting game in 1981 between the Rochester Red Wings and the Pawtucket Red Sox took a total of eight hours spread across
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
The peak eclipse experience was near Cairo, Illinois. In the year 2024 (seven years later), the next complete eclipse will occur with a maximum point almost exactly at the same point, and the paths of the 2017 and 2024 eclipses will have made a cross right over the southern tip of Illinois. Think cross in a biblical context, and they are seven years apart. Why seven? Why a cross?? Why in the state of my birth, Illinois? Is there a deeper message being communicated by the geometric alignments of the heavenly bodies?
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
Call me a lunatic, but I’m starting to see that nothing is random, especially when we delve deep into numbers associated with many of the most significant discoveries, disasters, or achievements in the human story.211 It may interest the reader to learn that the crew
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
solar maxima.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
That guy sure had a cool last name.
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
shattering vastness of space.301 Take ten minutes and look up the video “AmBeam—5th Dimension.” The Crab Nebula
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)
search “33 stars from heaven in DNA” or visit the Gnostic warrior site.309 German mathematician
Charles J. Wolfe (The 11:11 Code: The Great Awakening by the Numbers)