“I will pursue something that I love -- and hopefully become good at it, instead of pursuing something that I'm good at -- but don't love.”— Bryan Cranston, amazon.com
“Something I’ve paid attention to is being someone that people like to work with. I think that if you really touch someone on a personal level then they’ll be the ones who are fighting for you the next day at a meeting or pushing for you for a certain campaign.”— Gigi Hadid, thoughtcatalog.com
“Andy: 'So what do you do?' Frances: 'Eh... It's kinda hard to explain.' Andy: 'Because what you do is complicated?' Frances: 'Eh... Because I don't really do it.'”— Greta Gerwig, Josh Hamilton, Frances, Andy, amazon.com
“The goal of life is not to live comfortably. Comfortable is a quicksand. You must keep moving forward or agree to sign the waiver that you understand the risk of being suffocated by perks, 401K’s and ‘well hey, at least it’s a job.”— Paul Angone, allgroanup.com
“You can only become truly accomplished at something you love. Don’t make money your goal. Instead pursue the things you love doing and then do them so well that people can’t take their eyes off of you.”— Maya Angelou, quarterforyourcrisis.com
“Success in your twenties is more about setting the table than enjoying the feast.”— Paul Angone, amazon.com
“He can support himself AND provide for you. A guy is typically most confident, secure, and ready to be in an exclusive long-term relationship when he feels ‘settled.’ He's spent time building his career and has the time available to invest in your relationship. He's financially secure.”— Marni Battista, yourtango.com
“When you’re told to go into a career for the money, you lose sight of your purpose along the way. I truly believe the love of money is the root of all evil, and if you spend your life chasing it, then you’ll never have enough.”— Gloria Atanmo, gumroad.com
“The lottery question might get you thinking about what you would do if talent and money didn't matter. But they do. The question twenty-somethings need to ask themselves is what they would do with their lives if they didn't win the lottery.”— Meg Jay, amazon.com
“Don’t allow jobs and relationships to consume you so much that you forget what you want for yourself. A healthy work environment or romantic relationship shouldn’t deter you from personal growth.”— Abby Born, thoughtcatalog.com
“Anyone who passes judgement about your choice of college or college major is being a prick.”— Brandon Wenerd, thoughtcatalog.com
“Twenty-somethings who don’t feel anxious and incompetent at work are usually overconfident or underemployed.”— Meg Jay, amazon.com
“I kind of hate the phrase ‘having it all,’ but I think you can have … You can have a lot. Not everything. But a lot. And so part of being able to do that is making the choices upfront about which of the pieces of the pie are the most important to you right now. There are other times in my life when…”— Kathryn Minshew, nymag.com
“Whoever said less is more was right: the less bullshit and frivolity you have in your life, the more attention you have to focus on what is really going on.”— Kelly Cutrone, amazon.com
“I am a karmayogi: someone who becomes conscious of herself and the Divine through work, not through meditation in some ashram or saying Hail Marys.”— Kelly Cutrone, amazon.com
“We're constantly getting these messages to mind our own business and look the other way if we want to be well liked, to not tell the truth or speak our mind or say anything too intense. Well, I'm telling you here that this approach not only makes you party to other people's crimes against themselves…”— Kelly Cutrone, amazon.com
“Take the years when you’re young – say, between the ages of fifteen and thirty-five, before you have a mortgage or kids or anything else that needs to be fed – and go balls out on intuition and follow your dreams.”— Kelly Cutrone, amazon.com
“Dreams won't always take you on a straight path to destiny but they're usually related to what your soul wants for you. They'll force you to ask yourself the hard questions, they'll kick your ass and more importantly, they'll turn you on.”— Kelly Cutrone, amazon.com
“This was when I learned that you have to give up your life as you know it to get a new one: that sometimes you need to let go of everything you're clinging to and start over, whether because you've outgrown it or because it's not working anymore, or because it was wrong for you in the first place.”— Kelly Cutrone, amazon.com