Exercise Jumping To Conclusions Quotes

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The only exercise I get is jumping to conclusions.
Glen Cook (The White Rose (The Chronicles of the Black Company, #3))
Jumping to conclusions is often the only exercise some people get, and is always easier than finding the patience to discover the truth.
Karen White (The Sound of Glass)
The only exercise most people get is jumping to conclusions, running down their friends, sidestepping responsibility, and pushing their luck. —UNKNOWN
Hal Elrod (The Miracle Morning: The Not-So-Obvious Secret Guaranteed to Transform Your Life: Before 8AM)
Yeah well, my idea of exercising is jumping to conclusions, carrying things too far, pushing my luck.
K. Larsen (Committed (30 Days, #2))
The only exercise most people get is jumping to conclusions, running down their friends, sidestepping responsibility, and pushing their luck.
Hal Elrod (The Miracle Morning: The Not-So-Obvious Secret Guaranteed to Transform Your Life: Before 8AM)
The only exercise most people get is jumping to conclusions, running down their friends, sidestepping responsibility, and pushing their luck.
Hal Elrod (The Miracle Morning: The Not-So-Obvious Secret Guaranteed to Transform Your Life: Before 8AM)
don’t want to walk around with my imagination to depend on. I have a very evil imagination. It’s one of my wicked womanly powers. Much worse than magic.” “Is that right?” he asked with a laugh as he turned and crossed over to her. “Oh yes. Lots of exercise involved. I can jump to conclusions in a single bound. I’m more powerful than a murder motive. I’m faster than the town gossip. I am deadly and I must be stopped.
Jacquelyn Frank (Hunter)
She always says jumping to conclusions is the only exercise she needs.
Linda Hamner (Letters from Cleo and Tyrone: A Feline Perspective on Love, Life & Litter)
Some people take no mental exercise apart from jumping to conclusions.
Harold Acton
The typical day went something like this. I’d wake up at 4:30 a.m., munch a banana, and hit the ASVAB books. Around 5 a.m., I’d take that book to my stationary bike where I’d sweat and study for two hours. Remember, my body was a mess. I couldn’t run multiple miles yet, so I had to burn as many calories as I could on the bike. After that I’d drive over to Carmel High School and jump into the pool for a two-hour swim. From there I hit the gym for a circuit workout that included the bench press, the incline press, and lots of leg exercises. Bulk was the enemy. I needed reps, and I did five or six sets of 100–200 reps each. Then it was back to the stationary bike for two more hours. I was constantly hungry. Dinner was my one true meal each day, but there wasn’t much to it. I ate a grilled or sautéed chicken breast and some sautéed vegetables along with a thimble of rice. After dinner I’d do another two hours on the bike, hit the sack, wake up and do it all over again, knowing the odds were stacked sky high against me. What I was trying to achieve is like a D-student applying to Harvard, or walking into a casino and putting every single dollar you own on a number in roulette and acting as if winning is a foregone conclusion. I was betting everything I had on myself with no guarantees.
David Goggins (Can't Hurt Me: Master Your Mind and Defy the Odds)
Jumping to conclusions.
Simon A. Rego (The CBT Workbook for Mental Health: Evidence-Based Exercises to Transform Negative Thoughts and Manage Your Well-Being)
She turns to me. “How about you? Do you run?” “Not even in my nightmares,” I admit. “Megan’s exercise is walking her dog and jumping to conclusions,” Karla adds.
Reagan Davis (Murder, It Seams (A Knitorious Murder Mystery, #12))
Maybe we should both stop getting our exercise by jumping to conclusions and reaching for answers
Karen White