Rick Ross Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Rick Ross. Here they are! All 17 of them:

How many people you bless is how you measure success
Rick Ross
!M D@ B!GG3ST BO$$ TH@T U S33N THUS F@R.....
Rick Ross
Success comes from saying “Fuck it. I ain’t through just yet” and then giving it another go. Resiliency is what breeds success.
Rick Ross (Hurricanes: A Memoir)
The dangerous part about excuses is that a lot of them make sense.
Rick Ross (The Perfect Day to Boss Up: A Hustler's Guide to Building Your Empire)
A true friend is someone who pushes you and encourages you to become the best version of yourself. They don’t enable your bad habits and tendencies.
Rick Ross (The Perfect Day to Boss Up: A Hustler's Guide to Building Your Empire)
and if you’re not prepared, you better believe someone else will be. Your loss will be their gain.
Rick Ross (The Perfect Day to Boss Up: A Hustler's Guide to Building Your Empire)
When you make the decision to prioritize saving and investing your money over spending, you make a trade-off.
Rick Ross (The Perfect Day to Boss Up: A Hustler's Guide to Building Your Empire)
Fake niggas always caught up in the realest shit, Mama always told me “watch who you be dealin with” snake bitches can’t get wrapped up in your feelings with
Rick Ross
Work is often seen as a means for making money so we can enjoy that second life that we lead. Even if we derive some satisfaction from our careers we still tend to compartmentalize our lives in this way. This is a depressing attitude, because in the end we spend a substantial part of our waking life at work. If we experience this time as something to get through on the way to real pleasure, then our hours at work represent a tragic waste of the short time we have to live. —Robert Greene, Mastery
Rick Ross (The Perfect Day to Boss Up: A Hustler's Guide to Building Your Empire)
Good people do bad things when there are no options.
Rick Ross (Freeway Rick Ross: The Untold Autobiography)
God, [Freeway Rick] Ross firmly believed, had put him on earth to be the Cocaine Man. When he wasn't dealing, he was just like anybody else, maybe worse - an illiterate high-school dropout. A zero. But give him a pager and some dope, and he was a virtuoso.
Gary Webb, Dark Alliance
The reality is that most people of color learn early in America that we will have to work twice as hard to get half as far, and when we fail, no one will help us fall up. Immigrants, people of color, and women learn early that in order to make it in Amreeka you have to daft punk it through life. You have to do everything harder, better, faster, stronger, and smarter. Those are just the rules. The streets of Amreeka aren't paved with gold; they're paved with blood. As an immigrant, you'll take a beating but you'll be like Rick Ross and keep hustling. if Bob works eight hours a day, you work ten. If Samantha works late on Friday, then you work on Saturday. You go twenty feet just to get to ten feet.
Wajahat Ali (Go Back to Where You Came From: And Other Helpful Recommendations on How to Become American)
something no one had ever done before.” Jinx recruited bassist Oz Osbourne, guitarist Chris Neilson, Rick Durrett on keyboards, and drummer Steve Ross to form Coven in the late 1960s. The date of the band's formation is often given as 1969, but they were popular in their hometown and opening for groups like Vanilla Fudge, the Yardbirds, and Alice Cooper at least two years earlier;
Addison Herron-Wheeler (Wicked Woman: Women in Metal from the 1960s to Now)
Choose a dojo. There’s Ross Jeffries and the school of Speed Seduction, where subliminal language patterns are used to get a girl aroused. Or Mystery and the Mystery Method, in which social dynamics are manipulated to snag the most desirable woman in a club. Or David DeAngelo and Double Your Dating, in which he advocates keeping the upper hand over a woman through a combination of humor and arrogance that he calls cocky funny. Or Gunwitch and Gunwitch Method, in which the only thing students have to do is project animalistic sexuality and escalate physical contact until the woman stops them. His crude motto: “Make the ho say no.” Or there’s David X, David Shade, Rick H., Major Mark, and Juggler—the newest guru on the scene, who appeared online one day claiming he could pick up women better and faster than any other PUA simply by reading his grocery list. Then there are the inner-circle teachers, like Steve P. and Rasputin, who reveal their techniques only to those they deem worthy. Yes, there are plenty of mentors to choose from, each with his own methods and disciples, each operating under the belief that his way is the way. And the giants do battle constantly
Neil Strauss (The Game: Penetrating the Secret Society of Pickup Artists)
Channels I Watch Often Darwin on the Trail (One of my two favorites) Flat Broke Outside Homemade Wanderlust (The other of my two favorites) Technomadia.com Books Read and Reread The Backpacker’s Field Manual, Rick Curtis Step By Step: An Introduction to Walking the Appalachian Trail, Appalachian Trail Conservancy The Best About Backpacking, A Sierra Club Totebook, Edited by Densise Van Lear The Modern Backpackers Handbook, Glenn Randall Lipsmackin’ Backpackin’, Christine and Tim Conners A Women’s Guide to the Wilderness: Your Complete Outdoor Handbook, Ruby McConnell Wild, Cheryl Strayed Girl in the Woods, Aspen Matis A Walk in the Woods, Bill Bryson Grandma Gatewood’s Walk, Ben Montgomery Journey on the Crest, Cindy Ross A Blistered Kind of Love: One Couple’s Trial by Trail, Angela and Duffy Ballard Appalachian Trials, Zach Davis Almost Somewhere, Suzanne Davis How to create more from what you already have
Tory White (Appalachian Trail Thru Hike Tale: How I Completed a Traditional Thru-Hike on the Appalachian Trail)
Milk and his allies wanted their movement to signify hope. So he approached a friend, the graphic designer Gilbert Baker, who suggested a rainbow instead. “A rainbow fit us,” said the man who became famous as the “gay Betsy Ross.” “It is from nature. It connects us to all the colors—all the colors of sexuality, all the diversity in our community.
Rick Perlstein (Reaganland: America's Right Turn 1976-1980)
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross’s stages of grief: • Denial: “I can’t believe that happened.” • Anger: “How dare you treat me that way!” • Bargaining: “Look, just admit you made a mistake and we’ll be fine.” • Depression: “I feel sad and hurt and frustrated.” • Acceptance: “What happened was bad, but it is what it is, and I want to move on.” The last stage is the transition into active forgiveness.
Rick Hanson (Resilient: How to Grow an Unshakable Core of Calm, Strength, and Happiness)