Sweat Equity Quotes

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Providing for the ones he loves and care about, whether it's monetarily or with sweat equity, is part of a man's DNA, and if he loves and cares for you, this man will provide for you all these things with no limits.
Steve Harvey (Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man: What Men Really Think About Love, Relationships, Intimacy, and Commitment)
Rule #1: Sweat equity is the best startup capital
Mark Cuban (How to Win at the Sport of Business: If I Can Do It, You Can Do It)
Sweat equity is the most valuable equity there is.
Mark Cuban
Like what, baby? Like that you miss me?” She started to protest but he cut her off. “Do not say a word. Just listen a minute, if you can. I miss you too, like a fucking phantom limb, do you understand? You are a crucial, functioning part of me, always will be. But I get it. I’m a shit. I won’t deny. But I’ll never, ever be happy or complete without you.
Liz Crowe (Sweat Equity (Stewart Realty, #2))
We've created a system that demands almost no engagement with our food; we've wrung all the responsibility and sweat equity from the process. It's not that we're getting something for nothing - after all, we do pay for our food, and we suffer the consequences of dining from the industrial trough. But charging a package of center-cut pork chops to your Visa is a hell of a lot different than facing down the source of those chops with a .22 in one hand and a well-honed knife in the other.
Ben Hewitt (The Town That Food Saved: How One Community Found Vitality in Local Food)
Writing a novel is the ultimate in sweat equity.
Mark Rubinstein
When you put in a little sweat equity, it makes the work all the sweeter.
Jolie Sikes (Junk Gypsy: Designing a Life at the Crossroads of Wonder & Wander)
The real currency of your life is effort, best measured in the extra time you put in.
J.R. Rim
Given enough care, the objects you surround yourself with can become amulets, energetically charged with your love and attention. Your wooden kitchen table, which you wipe down with oil once a month and always use coasters on, is no longer just any table, it’s a talisman. It’s a symbol of how much you value meals with family and friends. Your sweat equity seals in the power of the table.
Tara Schuster (Buy Yourself the F*cking Lilies: And Other Rituals to Fix Your Life, from Someone Who's Been There)
In the Hebrew language, there is no distinction between knowing and doing. Knowing is doing and doing is knowing. In other words, if you aren't doing it, then you don't really know it... The phrase all out literally means "maximum effort." It's giving God everything you've got -- 100 percent. It's loving God with all your heart, soul, mind and strength. It's not just worshiping God with your words. It's worshiping God with blood, sweat, and tears. It's more than sincere sentiments. It's sweat equity in kingdom causes. You cannot be the hands and feet of Jesus if you're sitting on your butt.
Mark Batterson (All In: You Are One Decision Away From a Totally Different Life)
Grit. It’s part of who we are. Who we are meant to be. How we were raised. One of the most important things we were taught was how to work. When you do something yourself, with your own two hands, the intrinsic value increases exponentially. It is one of the core principles in the JG Mantra of DIY: Your pride in the end result is directly proportional to the amount of work and dedication you put into the project. We were taught the value of down-and-dirty, sweat-on-your-brow, muscles-achin’, backbreakin’, baby-needs-a-new-pair-of-shoes physical labor. It’s a little thing called “sweat equity.” Elbow grease. Good old-fashioned “get in there and get it done.” And thank goodness, because now we’re more intimidated by long lines at the shopping mall than we are by our JG job requirements.
Jolie Sikes (Junk Gypsy: Designing a Life at the Crossroads of Wonder & Wander)
Parenting pressures have resculpted our priorities so dramatically that we simply forget. In 1975 couples spent, on average, 12.4 hours alone together per week. By 2000 they spent only nine. What happens, as this number shrinks, is that our expectations shrink with it. Couple-time becomes stolen time, snatched in the interstices or piggybacked onto other pursuits. Homework is the new family dinner. I was struck by Laura Anne’s language as she described this new reality. She said the evening ritual of guiding her sons through their assignments was her “gift of service.” No doubt it is. But this particular form of service is directed inside the home, rather than toward the community and for the commonweal, and those kinds of volunteer efforts and public involvements have also steadily declined over the last few decades, at least in terms of the number of hours of sweat equity we put into them. Our gifts of service are now more likely to be for the sake of our kids. And so our world becomes smaller, and the internal pressure we feel to parent well, whatever that may mean, only increases: how one raises a child, as Jerome Kagan notes, is now one of the few remaining ways in public life that we can prove our moral worth. In other cultures and in other eras, this could be done by caring for one’s elders, participating in social movements, providing civic leadership, and volunteering. Now, in the United States, child-rearing has largely taken their place. Parenting books have become, literally, our bibles. It’s understandable why parents go to such elaborate lengths on behalf of their children. But here’s something to think about: while Annette Lareau’s Unequal Childhoods makes it clear that middle-class children enjoy far greater success in the world, what the book can’t say is whether concerted cultivation causes that success or whether middle-class children would do just as well if they were simply left to their own devices. For all we know, the answer may be the latter.
Jennifer Senior (All Joy and No Fun: The Paradox of Modern Parenthood)
He has a point,’ agreed Scott, the equity analyst who seemed to have sweat stains on his shirt, no matter what the weather. ‘You didn’t stop to think that maybe we’ve seen similar shit in our time? We’ve been at this a lot longer than you, girls. We would have handled this quickly, quietly, and we would have made it go away.
Louise O'Neill (Idol)
The nice thing about men is that they generally didn't pick up on the subtext of questions, typically accepting the face value meaning.
Monica McCallan (Sweat Equity (LadyLuck Startups, #1))
Perspective was a funny thing like that. It didn't change the problem, but it did help you see it in a different light.
Monica McCallan (Sweat Equity (LadyLuck Startups, #1))
I'm not trying to be preachy, but I think that what you learn about your dislikes is just as important as learning about what you do like. Bad partners happen. Bad people happen. It's learning from those experiences and ensuring it doesn't happen again.
Monica McCallan (Sweat Equity (LadyLuck Startups, #1))
I try to figure out if the person makes me better. If I want to be better when I'm with them.
Monica McCallan (Sweat Equity (LadyLuck Startups, #1))
Variety ran the headline “EQUITY BADLY WHIPPED,” while the producers gloated that Equity had “invaded a healthy, wealthy and happy family and tried to perform an operation upon a healthy baby.
Michael Schulman (Oscar Wars: A History of Hollywood in Gold, Sweat, and Tears)
When individuals form a business, they generally take a risk saying, “I’ll combine your efforts with the efforts of others and create something of greater value than you can do individually. If I’m wrong, I’ll still owe you for your effort. If I’m right, we create disproportionate value and I’ll keep a return for doing that.” Any shareholder who puts something of value into the business (money, know-how, sweat equity) expects to get a return of value for putting that in. However, a key is that return is at risk because until they create value for others as defined by others, they have no value to extract or return.
Greg Harmeyer (Impact with Love: Building Business for a Better World)
The lesson here is that a little sweat equity pays us back in meaning—and that is a high return.
Dan Ariely (Payoff: The Hidden Logic That Shapes Our Motivations (TED Books))
Losing oneself in prayer won't do, losing oneself in meditation won’t do, if we must be lost, let us lose ourselves in resuscitating this dying world of ours with our sweat and blood. People think meditation will solve everything. And to some extent, even I thought this way when I was a teenager. But the fact of the matter is, it won't. It’s not bad mark you, but contrary to popular belief, it’s not the key to all the problems of society. We need ten percent meditation, ninety percent revolution. Better yet, we need a life where meditation is revolution, revolution is meditation. It is this simple. Make justice your meditation, make equity your meditation, make love your meditation, and you won't need any of the traditional meditation. The greatest meditation is revolution for assimilation. La mayor meditación es la revolución para la asimilación. Justicia es mi meditación - igualdad es mi meditación - humanidad es mi meditación. Society needs your active involvement, not your pretend involvement. I'll say it to you plainly. If you don’t wanna get involved, that's perfectly fine, but don't pretend that you are doing great service to the world by praying and meditating isolated from the actual troubles of society. Prayer as means of self-sustenance is okay, but it mustn't be glorified beyond that point. Worse than non-involvement is pretend involvement. Either get involved or don't, there's no praying. Either serve or don't, there's no praying. Either lift or don't, there's no praying.
Abhijit Naskar (The Gentalist: There's No Social Work, Only Family Work)
I’ve built my company by investing a lot of sweat equity. Nothing came to me by accident. I’ve had my fair share of failures, but my father has always taught me a valuable lesson. As long as I can look up, I can stand up.
Scarlett Avery (The Seduction Factor (The Seduction Factor #1-5))