Quotes about Trouble
                        Eugene, Eugene, Eugene, this is a bad business!
                    — Charles Dickens
                        
                
                        You are a little low this evening, Frederick,' said the Father of the Marshalsea. 'Anything the matter?
                    — Charles Dickens
                        
                
                        If you're not willing to accept the pain real values incur, don't bother going to the trouble of formulating a values statement. You'll be better off without one.
                    — Patrick Lencioni
                        
                
                        The first step in solving a problem is to recognize that it does exist.
                    — Zig Ziglar
                        
                
                        Love feels no burden, thinks nothing of trouble, attempts what is above its strength, pleads no excuse of impossibility; for it thinks all things lawful for itself, and all things possible.
                    — Thomas a Kempis
                        
                
                        The world can create trouble in peace, but God can create peace in trouble.
                    — Thomas Watson
                        
                
                        Real trouble doesnt begin in a society until boredom has become its most general feature. Boredom will drive even quietminded people down paths they'd never imagined.
                    — Cormac McCarthy
                        
                
                        Real trouble doesn't begin in a society until boredom has become its most general feature. Boredom will drive even quietminded people down paths they never imagined.
                    — Cormac McCarthy
                        
                
                        When trouble comes, focus on God's ability to care for you.
                    — Charles Stanley
                        
                
                        Our trouble is not ignorance, but inaction.
                    — Dale Carnegie
                        
                
                        It is rest to the weary, daylight to the discouraged, sunshine to the sad, and Nature's best antidote for trouble.
                    — Dale Carnegie
                        
                
                        So you see how much effort a man will make and trouble he will invent to guard and defend himself from the boredom of peace of mind. Or rather perhaps the pervert who deliberately infests himself with lice, not just for the simple pleasure of being rid of them again, since even in the folly of youth we know that nothing lasts; but because even in that folly we are afraid that maybe Nothing will last, that maybe Nothing will last forever, and anything is better than Nothing, even lice.
                    — William Faulkner
                        
                 
                        