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The brilliant minds of our time and all time...Leonardo Da Vinci,"Blind ignorance does mislead us 'O" wretched mortals, open your eyes!"; Albert Einsteen,"If at first an idea isn't totally absurd, then there's no hope for it."; Napolean Bonaparte,"Space we can recover, time never"; Benjamin Franklin,"Lifes tragedy is that we get old too soon and wise too late"; Abraham Lincoln,"A friend is one who has the same enemies you have....and do I not destroy my enemies when I make them my friends?"; Niccolo Machiavelli,"It is better to be feared than loved, fear you can control, love, never."; Baltasar Gracian,"Folly consists not in committing folly, but being capable of concealing it. All men make mistakes, but the wise conceal the blunders they have made, while fools make them public. Reputation depends more on what is hidden than on what is seen. If you can't be good, be careful."; Winston Churchhill," La Rochefoucauld"Sincerity is found in very few men, and is often the cleverest of ruses-one is sincere in order to draw out the confidence and secrets of the other."; meeting an honest beautiful in mind and sexy in appearance woman would be good too...:)
I love to listen to music. It is my motivation when I have none. I listen to alot of different types. From alternative/rock to r&b, and from metal to classical. It just depend on what I'm doing and what I'm in the mood for.
There's nothing better than a good movie. Except of course good sex. But movies are fun too. "Heat" one of the all times. "Oceans Eleven" another classic. "Casino" of course. "Rounders", "Scarface", just about anything that has to do with a heist or gambling in it.
World Series of Poker, Nip/Tuck, Music Videos, Deal or No Deal, ESPN, and most sports shows.
Reading is one of my passions. Which is ironic, because I can't remember ever completely reading an entrire book while growing up. I guess when we mature we begin to enjoy the finer pleasures in life. I first got hooked on Sheldon, then Koontz, I love history and psychology. Books I've read and would recommend: The Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown, Memnoch the Devil by Anne Rice, The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene, The "Left Behind" Series by Tim La Haye and Jerry Jenkins, The Count of Monte Cristo(classic, and one of my all time favorite reads) by Alexandre Dumas, If Tomorrow Comes by Sidney Sheldon
The ones who were doubted and made it.