Lynne Cox Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Lynne Cox. Here they are! All 11 of them:

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Sometimes, he said, the important things take time, sometimes they don't just happen all at once, sometimes answers come out of time and struggle, and learning. sometimes you just have to try again in a different way.
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Lynne Cox (Grayson)
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Just wait, just be patient, he will return.
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Lynne Cox (Grayson)
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It’s better to be under-trained and rested than to be overtrained and tired. Β Β Β Β ~
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Lynne Cox (Open Water Swimming Manual: An Expert's Survival Guide for Triathletes and Open Water Swimmers)
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Even if words could reach to eternity there would not be enough to express the way I feel about you.
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Lynne Cox (Grayson)
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You know, the ocean is a very, very beautiful place. It is God’s gift to us,
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Lynne Cox (Swimming to Antarctica)
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It is important to be totally prepared, though it is equally important to make sure that you don’t overtrain.
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Lynne Cox (Open Water Swimming Manual: An Expert's Survival Guide for Triathletes and Open Water Swimmers)
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Words are sometimes too small, too confining, to convey the depth of thought and strength of emotions. How does a whale communicate love, hope, fear, or joy?
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Lynne Cox (Grayson)
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How much longer should I wait? The answer came to me. Wait as long as you need to. The waiting is as important as doing; it's the time you spent training and the rest in between; it's painting the subject and the space in between; it's the reading and the thinking about what you've read; it's the written words that , what is said, what is left unsaid, the space between the thoughts on the page, that makes the story, and it's the space between the notes, the intervals between fast and slow, that makes the music. It's the love of being together, the spacing, the tension of being apart, that brings you back together.
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Lynne Cox (Grayson)
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Many people are happy with things as they are. They are comfortable with what they already know. But if I didn't move outside my comfort level, how would I ever experience anything new, how would I ever learn to see or explore? I believe that each of us has a purpose for being here, that we have certain gifts and certain challenges we need to learn from and fulfill for our lives to have meaning and richness.
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Lynne Cox (Grayson)
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At Pittsburg State University in Kansas, a mandatory stop on the itinerary of anyone writing about the Little Blue Books, Steve Cox and Randy Roberts were especially helpful. The one who is most responsible for my fascination with this subject, however, is Bridget Cain, who picked up some Blue Books for me at a junk shop in Lawrence way back when. Wesley Hogan helped me find my way through the civil rights journalism of Lawrence Goodwyn. Joe Vaccaro instructed me in the history of Minnesota radicalism. Matt Stoller furnished me with one of the best anecdotes in this entire enterprise. Liz and Matt Bruenig steered me toward probably a dozen more. Barry Lynn, who is as close to a populist as Washington, D.C., will allow, encouraged me throughout.
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Thomas Frank (The People, No: The War on Populism and the Fight for Democracy)
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conduct of a publicly funded morgue. Pittsburgh Detective Rich Meister shared his insights, and Lynne Cox taught me about the mental challenges and physiological
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Martin J. Smith (Time Release)