Quotes about character-development

Unarine Ramaru -

Engaging solely to validate your opinion takes away from the character building process.

Pawan Mishra -

Don’t interrupt when your characters take a flight of their own.

Abhijit Naskar - Either Civilized or Phobic: A Treatise on Homosexuality

If your nationality is lost, nothing is lost – if your religion is lost, nothing is lost – if your ethnicity is lost, nothing is lost – but if your character is lost, then you are more lost than Donald Trump.

Kilroy J. Oldster - Dead Toad Scrolls

None of us commences life utterly alone. We each carry within our granular mass the protoplasm residue of past generations’ ideas, customs, values, infatuations, prejudices, ethics, and mores. The lees wrought from our seedlings contribute to the social order that oversees a newborn’s future. How we conduct ourselves in the here and now emulates our heritage, delineates the parameters of the present culture, and sets the embryonic stage for the emergent ethos of our future and for the generation

Kilroy J. Oldster - Dead Toad Scrolls

Every person fails, nobody achieves everything that he or she set out to achieve. Nobody, regardless of how many personal triumphs they enjoy, no matter how rich or powerful they become, goes through life without encountering failure. You cannot fail unless a person valiantly tries to accomplish a task. The most audacious person readily attempts difficult projects, despite feeling uncertain if they can prevail. Successful people exhibit the character to respond positively to failure. Some failur

Luffina Lourduraj -

Beauty without a character is a waste.

Sara Sheridan - Operation Goodwood

The world is changing and you’re only just becoming accustomed to it. You’re changing, I suppose. You’ve changed since I’ve known you.’‘How?’‘You’ve come more alive.

Craig D. Lounsbrough -

I am thankful that there are those among us who have sacrificed dearly on behalf of us. And I ardently pray to God that I might be less like myself and more like them.

Irina Lopatina -

From the beginning, I did not intend to create a typical classic fantasy. I wanted an organic, harmonious world where my story could evolve. If this world needed gnomes, I put them in there. As for drevalyankas, pikshas, bolugs and other totally original creatures, they appeared there somehow by themselves in the course of events, and then just began "to get under the feet of the main heroes"...

Rebecca McNutt -

A lot of people who read my novel 'Smog City' ask me why I never killed off either of the two main characters. To be honest, it's because I've given them life. Not literally of course, but since I spent so much time developing and creating my characters, they've ended up with complex personalities, in fact they're almost sentient in a way, and to write them off as dead would be like killing a close friend to me.

John Gardner - The Art of Fiction: Notes on Craft for Young Writers

The writer's characters must stand before us with a wonderful clarity, such continuous clarity that nothing they do strikes us as improbable behavior for just that character, even when the character's action is, as sometimes happens, something that came as a surprise to the writer himself. We must understand, and the writer before us must understand, more than we know about the character; otherwise neither the writer nor the reader after him could feel confident of the character's behavior when

Richard Scarsbrook - Rockets Versus Gravity

Each time I discovered a potential link between one character’s story and another’s, several more connections would reveal themselves, like a beautiful, complex web spinning itself.

L.M. Montgomery - Anne of the Island

I'd write of people and places like I knew, and I'd make my characters talk everyday English; and I'd let the sun rise and set in the usual quiet way without much fuss over the fact. If I had to have villains at all, I'd give them a chance, Anne--I'd give them a chance. There are some terrible bad men the world, I suppose, but you'd have to go a long piece to find them...But most of us have got a little decency somewhere in us. Keep on writing, Anne.

S.R. Crawford - Bloodstained Betrayal

Letti wasn’t born to pass through the world. She had been born to sit atop of it.

C.S. Lewis -

Education without values, as useful as it is, seems rather to make man a more clever devil.

Luke Taylor -

Great relationships create great characters. Make them feel real. Alive. Tangible and unforgettable. Bad relationships kill them. Bury them. Make you wish they hadn't wasted your precious time.

Kilroy J. Oldster - Dead Toad Scrolls

We employ education and the convictions gained through the intermeshing of personal experiences and fresh ideas to establish the configuration of our being that in actuality was our mysterious potentiality from the very inception of our birth.

Dorothy L. Sayers - The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club

Books... are like lobster shells, we surround ourselves with 'em, then we grow out of 'em and leave 'em behind, as evidence of our earlier stages of development.

Matthew Kelly -

We become the books we read.

Abhijit Naskar - Principia Humanitas

The world needs gigantic strong wills in front of which even the mountains will be crumbled.

Abhijit Naskar - Principia Humanitas

Character is what the world needs - character that will empower the mind with such an unimaginable strength that one would meet death face to face and say “some other time, pal!

Abhijit Naskar - Principia Humanitas

What I want from you comrade, what the world wants from you, O dearest, are the neurons of steel, within which dwells a mind of the same material of which the thunderbolt is made.

Charlotte Eriksson - Empty Roads & Broken Bottles; in search for The Great Perhaps

It's about personal development. It's about creating your own character and pushing it to the limit. It's about pushing yourself so far out of your own and everybody else's idea of who you are and what you're capable of, that you no longer believe in limits. It's about reaching beyond your so-called potential, because your potential is never where you or anyone else expects it to be, not even close. It's about being able to say with the last breath of your life “I used all my potential and all m

Kilroy J. Oldster - Dead Toad Scrolls

Fateful encounters with a cruel world reveal our character. No human is immune from heartbreaking loss. Regardless of our socioeconomic status, eventually everybody shall suffer a grievous personal loss, a body blow that inflicts pain of inexpressible magnitude.

Ellen G. White - Patriarchs And Prophets

Even under false accusation those who are in the right can afford to be calm and considerate. God is acquainted with all that is misunderstood and misinterpreted by men, and we can safely leave our case in His hands. He will as surely vindicate the cause of those who put their trust in Him as He searched out the guilt of Achan. Those who are actuated by the spirit of Christ will possess that charity which suffers long and is kind.

Kilroy J. Oldster - Dead Toad Scrolls

We develop our whole character from our thoughts, actions, attentive observations, and from the resolute pursuit of our inspirational dreams.

Beau Sides - Unseen Tears: The Challenges of Orphans and Orphanages in China

Wealth gives you options, and your decisions about what to do with your options say much about your character.

Kilroy J. Oldster - Dead Toad Scrolls

Life will never meet all of our expectations. We must nonetheless accept all disappointments without becoming bitter and cynical. We must always remain mindful of the opportunity to extend kindness and work to improve our character.

Hyrum W. Smith - The 3 Gaps: Are You Making a Difference?

Character, simply stated, is doing what you say you’re going to do.

Bohdi Sanders - Modern Bushido: Living a Life of Excellence

Don't seek to be respected by everyone, rather seek to be worthy of being respected by everyone.

Craig Hart - The Writer's Tune-up Manual: 35 Exercises That Will Scrape the Rust Off Your Writing

Perfection should generally be avoided in a character. Real people, such as your readers, aren’t flawless and chances are they are not going to be able to fully identify with a character who is.

Craig Hart - The Writer's Tune-up Manual: 35 Exercises That Will Scrape the Rust Off Your Writing

In real life people do occasionally act out of character or do things we wouldn’t normally expect them to do. In fiction, there should be a good reason for a character to do something outside of the ordinary.

Tiffany Madison -

If one abandons their principles when tested by struggle, they were never true principles but advertisements for character they never possessed.

Henry Cloud -

Encourage literally came from "in courage." The courage is put "into" you from outside. Our character and abilities grow through internalizing from others what we do not possess in ourselves.

John Yorke - Into the Woods: A Five Act Journey Into Story

All tales, then, are at some level a journey into the woods to find the missing part of us, to retrieve it and make ourselves whole. Storytelling is as simple - and complex - as that. That's the pattern. That's how we tell stories.

Kilroy J. Oldster - Dead Toad Scrolls

Character modification requires active participation in challenging new experiences, but without reflection upon our encounters in life and the purposeful alteration in our base philosophy new experiences alone will not result in core personality changes. Our thoughts become our habits, and our habits reveal our character. Only by thinking and acting differently will a person attain the quality of character that they seek.

Kilroy J. Oldster - Dead Toad Scrolls

With every passing day, we add a page to our personal story, an illustrative script that casts our character shaped by an implacable external environment and fashioned by our supple state of inwardness.

A.J. Flowers - A Guide to Writing Your First Novel

While every chapter should have goals to further the plot and delve our readers deeper into our world, there must be one goal above all else: Emotional Impact.

A.S. Byatt - Possession

He was a compact, clearcut man, with precise features, a lot of very soft black hair, and thoughtful dark brown eyes. He had a look of wariness, which could change when he felt relaxed or happy, which was not often in these difficult days, into a smile of amused friendliness and pleasure which aroused feelings of warmth, and something more, in many women.

Yay Padua-Olmedo - Going Up?: Making Right Choices at Work

CENTER-OF-THE-UNIVERSE, that was me entering the workplace. And I woke up one day soon after that, struggling at the bottom of a vast ocean. But I needed that. Humbling experiences are part of growing - they help shape us and mold our character. Welcome to life.

Bohdi Sanders - Men of the Code: Living as a Superior Man

Your reputation is what others think of you your character is what you truly are. Reputations can be manipulated character can only be developed and maintained.

Charbel Tadros -

Never blame your shortcomings on your personality. You're not built that way you are responsible of constantly rebuilding yourself and seeking perfection by finding your faults and overcoming them.

Bohdi Sanders - Men of the Code: Living as a Superior Man

The superior man responds the inferior man reacts.

Victor LaValle -

The person you are (in total, at that moment in time) is what creates the story you're writing. It's infused in every piece of punctuation, in the plot, in the most minor character who crosses the page. It's all your voice.

L.J. Davis -

Lowell’s best friend was the heroically moustached art director of a tobacco magazine that published in the same building where Lowell worked at plumbing. His name was Harry Balmer, and despite the evidence of his moustache he was nervous, compulsive, and wracked with small fears. He looked his best from across a wide room; the closer you got to him, the more he seemed to fall apart into a mass of twitches and gnawed finernails and the clearer it became that this big, smart-looking moustache was

Nancy Kress - Emotion & Viewpoint: Techniques and Exercises for Crafting Dynamic Characters and Effective Viewpoints

You must learn to be three people at once: writer, character, and reader.

Colleen McCullough - The Thorn Birds

Meggie dropped to her knees, scrambling frantically to collect the miniature clothes before more damage was done them, then she began picking among the grass blades where she thought the pearls might have fallen. Her tears were blinding her, the grief in her heart new, for until now she had never owned anything worth grieving for.

Martin Luther King Jr. -

The function of education, therefore, is to teach one to think intensively and to think critically. But education which stops with efficiency may prove the greatest menace to society. The most dangerous criminal may be the man gifted with reason, but with no morals.

Melina Marchetta - Finnikin of the Rock

But Froi looked around with wonder. As if he had never seen the world from up so high before.

Brandon T. Snider - My Little Pony: The Elements of Harmony Vol. II

When her pony pals are down in the dumps, Fluttershy swoops in to cheer them up in her own sweet and quiet way. She delights in the beauty of friendship and the nice feelings that comes from being nice. Fluttershy is definitely a little bit meek, but she can be fierce when she needs to be. She's faced her fears and grown a whole bunch, and she continues to build her self-confidence! Oh, and she loves her animals. A LOT! Even when they're being naughty little critters. She's probably the most in

Stella Atrium -

Delicious days ahead for solitude and writing and, oh yes, the holiday meal with family. Live with my characters until term starts in 2012!

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