Archive for the ‘truths of life’ Tag

02/13/2025 “THE TRUTH”   Leave a comment

Do you consider yourself a truthful person? As a young person I thought I was always truthful but as I aged, I discovered just how wrong I was. There have been many times that I used exaggeration to make a point clearer and more interesting but in fact that is actually being somewhat untruthful. I think I can safely say that everyone at one time or another plays fast and loose with the truth for any number of reasons. Here is a collection of comments and quotations about the truth that make a great deal of sense.

  • “The trouble with stretching the truth is that it’s apt to snap back.” Anonymous
  • Truth is such a rare thing; it is delightful to tell it.” Emily Dickinson
  • The man who speaks the truth is always at ease.” Persian Proverb
  • If you speak the truth have a foot in the stirrup.” Turkish Proverb
  • “Truth is the anvil which has worn out many a hammer.” Anonymous

  • “Everyone loves the truth, but not everyone tells it.” Yiddish Proverb
  • Men occasionally stumble over the truth, but most of them pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing had happened.” Winston Churchill
  • Craft must have clothes, but truth lives to go naked.” Thomas Fuller
  • Truth is heavy; few therefore can bear it.” Hebrew Proverb
  • “Seldom any splendid story is wholly true.” Anonymous

And finally, a quote from one of my favorite people: Mark Twain

When in doubt, tell the truth.

And here’s one of my own:

“Always tell the truth and do the right thing regardless of the consequences.”

THE TRUTH WILL SET YOU FREE

10/27/2002 “Truths”   Leave a comment

It’s seems to be an appropriate time for a few truths. We get so much BS from the Media and advertisers that many times we really aren’t sure what’s true and what’s not. Let me lay some truths on you today for a change. These are listed in no particular order.

  • Most American car horns honk in the key of F.
  • Silly Putty was the result of a failed attempt by General Electric to create a synthetic rubber for use in World War II.
  • A bank in Vernal, Utah, was built from bricks delivered by the U.S. Postal Service in 1916. The builders discovered that it was cheaper to mail them then to ship them from Salt Lake City.
  • Carl Hubbard is the only person inducted into three different sports halls of fame: baseball, college football, and Pro football.
  • The final resting place of Dr. Eugene Shoemaker, a geologist, is the moon. He arranged to have his ashes placed on board the Lunar Prospector spacecraft that was launched on January 6, 1998.
  • The “Too T TrappeR” is a charcoal filter shaped like a seat cushion that’s designed to silence and deodorizing any unwanted fart’s. It comes in gray or black and makes a rather awkward Christmas gift.

  • In days past, the term boner referred to a person who was a textile worker who inserted stays into women’s corsets and brassieres.
  • The only marsupial that is native to North America is the Virginia opossum.
  • Americans drink 50 times more soda now than they did a century ago.
  • It takes about 2,893 licks to get to the center of a typical Tootsie Pop.
  • The longest overdue book in the United States is 145 years (in Ohio). The longest in the world is 288 years (in Germany).
  • Breast reduction is the fifth most popular plastic surgery procedure for men.

QUOTATION OF THE DAY

“Ninety-eight percent of the adults in this country are decent, hard-working, honest Americans.

It’s the other lousy two percent that get all the publicity. But then, we elected them.”

Lily Tomlin