Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Mrrzy Date: 29 Oct 20 - 05:16 PM These are great but, um, should this thread not be below the line? |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: leeneia Date: 29 Oct 20 - 04:06 PM He[a rich person] was born on third base and thinks he hit a triple. From a column by Leonard Pitts, a black columnist in Miami. Pitts says it is a common saying. A triple is a good hit in baseball which lets the batter get to three of the four bases. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Joe_F Date: 28 Oct 20 - 09:16 PM A $150 bill is just as queer as a $3 bill. Conversation should have a distinctive lack of purpose. Inner conflict is the best kind. "I have to draw a line somewhere" is rhetorically weak, but morally it tells the truth. No-one ever lacks a good reason for suicide. Write drunk; edit sober. Malice is punished by neglect. Why tell lies, when the truth is so much more offensive? Nonloving kindness is the more admirable kind. Deliver me from every pride -- the Middle, High, and Low -- That bars me from a brother's side, whatever pride he show. If you can't say anything good, make up something bad. The wise man gratifies every appetite and ever passion; the fool sacrifices all the rest to pall and satiate one. Make the program complicated enough to feel pain; then punish it until it does what you want it to. Occasions for being in touch with your emotions are about as common as occasions for being in touch with your intestines. Wire your fetishisms in parallel. Two stupidities: "If it's worth doing, you can get a grant for it." "If it's worth doing, there's a market for it." Never express yourself more clearly than you think. What is not surrounded by uncertainty cannot be the truth. Don't hate yourself in the morning. Sleep till noon. If you pray to God to smite your enemies, Satan is your god. Good scientists try to prove their favorite theories are wrong. If "multiculturalism" means "freedom of association", it is superfluous; if any more or less, it is pernicious. Beware of anything that answers everything. Don't waste time killing the snake. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Dave Hanson Date: 28 Oct 20 - 08:14 AM Reality is an illusion created by a lack of alcohol. Dave H |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: BobL Date: 28 Oct 20 - 05:12 AM One last trawl through my file of sayings that should be on badges, T-shirts or bumper stickers... A man who admits he is wrong when he is wrong, is wise. A man who admits he is wrong when he is right, is married. Always predict the worst and you'll be hailed as a prophet -- Tom Lehrer. Anything asserted without evidence may be dismissed without evidence (Hitchens' Razor). Better to look a fool with an umbrella on a dry day than a fool without an umbrella on a wet day. Don't worry, it only seems kinky the first time. EVERYTHING is ALWAYS in the last place you look for it. How come to falsify a document is to doctor it, but to verify it is to vet it? If you have to eat two frogs, eat the uglier one first. If you torture the data sufficiently, it will confess to anything. If your mistakes are big enough, the pain only lasts a second -- Demotivators Inc. Just because you can doesn't mean you should. Luck is what happens when preparation meets opportunity. More people have won a Darwin Award than a Nobel Prize. Nothing brings tears to the eyes of a native speaker so much as a Yorkshireman trying to speak Welsh. On some days you're the pigeon, on others you're the statue. Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one -- Albert Einstein. Reality may be an illusion, but it's the only place where you can get a decent cup of coffee -- Tom Gauld. Sometimes a cigar is simply a cigar -- Sigmund Freud. The paperless office is like the paperless toilet: achievable but not desirable. The skin is mightier than the banana. There is NO substitute for cheating. Those whom the gods wish to destroy, they first grind exceeding small -- Frank Johnson. To find your handsome prince, you have to kiss a lot of frogs. Where there's smoke, there's an engineer in trouble. You never understand any task really thoroughly until you try to teach someone else to do it. Youth and enthusiasm are no match for old age and treachery. Apologies if I've repeated anything earlier in the thread. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,paperback Date: 27 Oct 20 - 04:31 PM Can't shit a bullshitter and hand me a shovel it's getting pretty deep in here |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Joe_F Date: 26 Oct 20 - 09:49 PM If you handle other people's money, you need to pay yourself well to protect yourself from the temptation to steal. Life doesn't come with a meaning. That's a user modification and voids the warranty. You can't fake out a train. WYSIWYG, but NWYW. As a cure for stupidity, rudeness is no substitute for assault and battery. A little good luck, a little bad luck, and you lose your underwear. Live each day as if it were your last. Someday you'll be right. The secret to originality is knowing how to hide your sources. The most respectful thing you can do to a bully is hit back. The right to hurt people's feelings is the only right worth having. Know how to accept rejection and reject acceptance. Sincerity is so cheap, it's a wonder anyone bothers to be a hypocrite. If you did not wish to be ridden, why did you become an ass? Women expect men to change when they marry, and men expect women to stay the same; but they never do. Look into the pewter pot To see the world as the world is not. A hard heart is no infallible protection against a soft head. Always some flakes rise, But it is correct to say The snow is falling. Markets can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent. Relax! It's already hopeless. Repulsive up close, less so at a distance. Attractive at a distance, less so up close. Make sure in advance that when the forces of evil triumph, you will be on the losing side. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Mrrzy Date: 26 Oct 20 - 04:19 PM When I was leaving for the States to go to college, paternal advice included If you don't know whom to vote for, vote the straight democratic ticket. I did not know what either democratic or ticket meant... And it was Hatched. Don't count your boobies until they are Hatched. Sorry. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Gda Music Date: 26 Oct 20 - 03:22 PM The Russians fight with Timoshenko The British with a tin of Blanco Bullshit baffles brains! GJ |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Jos Date: 26 Oct 20 - 08:11 AM From the same list: "What sinners remember best is that they were happy while sinning." "Every moment of happiness is a timeless victory over Satan that can never be annulled." So ... you can defeat Satan by sinning ... |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Lost Chicken in High Weeds Date: 25 Oct 20 - 08:44 PM "never stick your ____ in crazy" |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Joe_F Date: 22 Oct 20 - 05:58 PM If you have friends in any large organization, you also have enemies there. Two stupidities: "If it isn't a fight, I can't win." "It's never a fight, so we can't lose." In the end, deceivers deceive themselves. Beware of geeks baring gifs. Some things are true even though some people say them. Stifle a bad impulse, and you have some consolation. Stifle a good impulse, and you are in a bad way. Don't worry. It won't last. Nothing does. Don't be childish. The children might hear you. Public opinion might be worthy of attention if you were the only one paying attention to it. It is the fate of fools to amuse their enemies and bore their friends. What sinners remember best is that they were happy while sinning. You're never too old to do something stupid. Every moment of happiness is a timeless victory over Satan that can never be annulled. One doesn't fly the enemy's flag, but there is no need to call it a bad flag. Cheap repairs for the cheap ones. Easy writing, hard reading. Of the components of love, jealousy has the longest decay time. If you can't get the blues off your mind, get your mind off the blues. Politicians need to have an indecent respect for the opinion of mankind. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,John from Kemsing Date: 21 Oct 20 - 06:20 AM My mother, having bought some wooden clothes pegs from a woman at the door step was thanked with, " Bless you dear. May you never have more than you want and may you never have less than you need!" |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Mr Red Date: 21 Oct 20 - 04:50 AM Is making up stuff just for the sake of posting "folklore?" It will be one day. Is what common folk did in years gone by Folklore? Or History? The answer is yes and yes. And with the ubiquity of the internet, it probably is already. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Jos Date: 21 Oct 20 - 04:23 AM "Be 30% more considerate of others than they are of you, to allow for bias." That one reminds me of my mother's view of give and take as a recipe for a happy marriage - each of the couple should give fifty per cent more than they take. It worked for her. (I'm not sure about the one about moustaches and kissing though. Was that one composed by someone who had a moustache, rather than the kissee?) |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,paperback Date: 21 Oct 20 - 01:56 AM The squeaky mouse gets the cat |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Joe_F Date: 20 Oct 20 - 06:00 PM Mixima should be rendered manimal. Quotation marks and car horns are warning devices that are used by the vulgar to express their feelings. Six days shalt thou work and do all thou are able -- The seventh, the same, and clean out the stable. How we got here is no indication of what to do next. Beware of single-issue people and multiple-issue organizations. Be grateful when what makes no sense makes no difference. A potato without pepper is like a kiss without a mustache. There is nothing wrong with devil theories in politics. Just look to the devil in the mirror. If you insist on working like a badly programmed computer, you will have plenty of cheap competition. One compass points north. Two compasses point at each other. Treat a cold with the contempt it deserves. Be sloppy enough that a surprise can happen, and careful enough that you can tell what it was. Pretense must be more perfect than performance. The greater the love, the more false to its object. It is the duty of a patriot to protect his country from its government. Ice belongs in bourbon, not underfoot. Be 30% more considerate of others than they are of you, to allow for bias. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Mo the caller Date: 20 Oct 20 - 11:54 AM We were often told "They that ask don't get" My friend added "they that don't ask don't want". Good excuse for not sharing anything. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,The Man from UNCOOL Date: 19 Oct 20 - 10:23 PM I think the orgy one is Ogden Nash. The "accomplish plenty" one (or a variant of it) is sometimes credited to Ronald Reagan [unlikely he coined it, but he displayed a block on his desk with it written on]. Winner of a BBC epithet competition some years ago [to my chagrin, I didn't log the name of the author]: "Casualties are the first truth of war." |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Joe_F Date: 19 Oct 20 - 09:56 PM You need two out of three: altitude, airspeed, and a brain. Consoling the useless is some use. Be careful what you do with your resentment. If you can't pay it back, pay it forward. You don't have to outrun the enemy as long as you can outrun your friends. "Need" needs "in order to" in order to make sense. Wanking is fine, but fucking you can actually meet people. When scared of the dark, it may help to close your eyes. As Balaam found out, even an ass may see something you don't. Try to make the next to last mistake. Here is truth by the bucketful: There's sex and friendship; the rest is bull. Put down love if you like, but don't knock heat. Human nature is something we are supposed to rise above. When the water reaches the upper decks, follow the rats. Home is heaven and orgies are vile, But I like an orgy, once in a while. The graduations on a whiskey bottle: Jocose, Morose, Bellicose, Comatose. Eat, drink, and be merry, and live to regret it. You find out what's really wrong with an idea when it succeeds. You can accomplish plenty if you don't care who gets the credit. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Steve Shaw Date: 19 Oct 20 - 11:11 AM 'But thy eternal summer shall not fade' I saw this line from Sonnet 18 used as the epigraph in a biography of Mozart (The Life And Death Of Mozart by Michael Levey). I've always nurtured a vague hope that someone will have found my personality to have been sufficiently sunny to put this on my headstone... ;-) |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: The Man from UNCOOL Date: 19 Oct 20 - 10:55 AM e.g. "Consult" the sham of seeking opinions on a course already decided upon. (I may be paraphrasing slightly, from AB's DD, cited above). This was compiled from about the 1880s thru the ?early 1900s, yet it sounds like it could have been coined in the 2000s. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,Nick Dow Date: 19 Oct 20 - 10:10 AM or Ambrose Bierce. Check out the Devil's Dictionary if you haven't already. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Mo the caller Date: 19 Oct 20 - 08:20 AM Reminds me of a party quiz /game where you are given a list of quotations and have to say whether they come from the Old Testament, new Testament or Shakespeare. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Mo the caller Date: 19 Oct 20 - 08:18 AM Guest quoted "It must needs be that offenses come, but woe to that man by whom the offense cometh" How modern does it have to be to qualify? Matthew 18:7 was written a while ago. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,guest Date: 19 Oct 20 - 07:36 AM I had a work colleague who always maintained that "Many a true jest is spoken in words" one of my bosses avered "Hard work kills horses" |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,Nick Dow Date: 19 Oct 20 - 02:32 AM IF (Virginia Graham) If you can go unswerving as an arrow, Favouring neither foreigner nor friend, If though the gate be straight, the pathway narrow, You can pursue it to the very end, If you can wait for those who lag behind you, If you can gather strangers to your breast, If the sorbate traveller can find you A home from home, an harbinger of rest. If you are guided by some heavenly power, Lit from within by a celestial light, If you can keep your bearings hour by hour However grey the day or dark the night, If you can nurse the iron in your soul, Finish the journey you have well begun, Live on these lines till you have reached your goal, You’ll be a tram, my son. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,The Man from UNCOOL Date: 18 Oct 20 - 08:48 PM Isn't the tomato one from the OP by the late Miles Kington (of Instant Sunshine)? There are those who like money round, so it goes round; the rest like it flat, so it piles up. Happiness is a bouquet made from those flowers within reach. Grant me faith, spare me religion, and God protect me from the Church. (This has that same knowingly ironic self-reference that "Don't say don't" has). "If you know your customers' business better than they do… " you're prob. CEO of Facebook. Eschew obfuscation. Never put off 'til tomorrow what you can get someone else to do. Nothing succeeds like a budgie without teeth. Don't do anything _I_ wouldn't do (not that that leaves much… ) You can't be proud of who YOU are until you're proud of who everyone else is (Dick Gaughan's mum: perhaps that makes it not modern?) 10 Oct 20 05:39 IMHO, some of those NYTimes meaningless proverbs DO seem to have meaning: "Not all firstborns become king" sounds like advice to parents not to assume their first baby will succeed without [their, or someone else's] input, or perhaps not to become too starstruck. "The stars don't wait for the king's birthday to shine" speaks of some things being eternal, or of worldly (even supposedly respected worldly) things NOT being: a kind of reverse "sic transit gloria mundi" — itself a translation of "Just after the weekend, I threw up / barfed in Gloria's van" :-) |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Steve Shaw Date: 18 Oct 20 - 05:54 PM Anus horribilis: Her Maj's haemorrhoids in the year 1992. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST Date: 18 Oct 20 - 05:43 PM If you know your customers' business better than they do, you are all in the wrong business. Choice of attention is to the inner life what choice of action is to the outer. Everyone is entitled to the minimum of self-deception required for self-respect. So be warned by my lot, which I know you will not. Applause makes a good time to fart. It is only the dead who have seen the end of war. Whatever is not worth doing is worth doing well. Money is like muck, no good unless it be spread. Have you set up your environment so that you are punished for being careful? It must needs be that offenses come, but woe to that man by whom the offense cometh! The brain is supposed to stop what goes in the ears from coming out the mouth. Less negativity, more nakedivity. Don't call him a fool; ask yourself *whose* fool. Each came prepared to forgive; neither came prepared to be forgiven. The bottom line is in hell. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,Nick Dow Date: 18 Oct 20 - 05:01 PM THE FOOL A member of a powerful and far reaching tribe, with overpowering influence in every area of human affairs. It was he who invented nationalism and taught the nations war, it was he who invented class prejudice, the poll tax, newspapers, the legal system and car clampers. As the dawn of civilisation first beheld he fooleth now! When the rest of us have retired to oblivion from old age and pestilence he will sit up and write ten volumes of his memoirs. (Nick Dow with tongue firmly in cheek and once again heavily influenced by Ambrose Bierce) |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: meself Date: 18 Oct 20 - 03:15 PM The house always wins. The Peter Principle: in a bureaucracy, every employee rises to his level of incompetence. No pain, no gain - and its more sensible corollary, No pain, no pain. No gets out of here alive. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,paperback Date: 18 Oct 20 - 02:17 PM Annus horribilis |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: leeneia Date: 18 Oct 20 - 01:05 PM "The ability to enjoy oneself at a low level of competence is a precious resource for happiness." That reminds me of a quotation from Robert Schumann that I keep on my piano. "Endeavor to play easy pieces well and with elegance; that is better than to play difficult pieces badly." |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST Date: 17 Oct 20 - 05:38 PM Hold your nose and vote the straight Democratic ticket. [This advice has been traced to the election of 1896. It has worn well.] Quantity for the young, quality for the middle-aged, reliability for the old. Dress for success: wear a white penis. The most valuable losers are ahead most of the time. A little of what you fancy does you good. Malt does more than Milton can To justify God's ways to man. When you have taken a wrong turn, a step backward is a step in the right direction. Rules, tomatoes, entertainment: homegrown is best. Of all the adornments of power, the most impressive is restraint. People never lie so much as after a hunt, during a war, or before an election. When you see an obituary and say "Was that old bastard still alive?", you know you have reached a certain age. When you are trying to make an impression, the chances are that is the impression you will make. The ability to enjoy oneself at a low level of competence is a precious resource for happiness. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Mrrzy Date: 17 Oct 20 - 05:03 PM If you DO not when you may, you shall not when you will, is how I heard that one. Don't count your boobies before they are harched is my total fave of those James Thurber ones. Being told to get over it is not one of the stages of grief. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,Dave Hunt Date: 17 Oct 20 - 10:07 AM If it moves and it shouldn't = Gaffa tape If it should move and it doesn't = WD40 |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Doug Chadwick Date: 17 Oct 20 - 04:28 AM Big prizes make many losers That's one that I am going to take away from here. DC |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Joe_F Date: 16 Oct 20 - 06:17 PM If you do the right thing under duress, you still get credit, but you don't have as much fun. If it moves, fondle it, except porcupines, ball lightning, and policemen. Money is especially valuable in that it is overvalued. It is a sin to think evil of others, but not always a mistake. Failure teaches a valuable lesson: that we are liable to fail again. You have to die of something. Reason will conflict with faith so long as respect for evidence conflicts with contempt for evidence. Some difficulties present valuable opportunities, and the rest present valuable excuses. Compromise is the business of politicians. Leadership is the business of martyrs. Mens sana qui mal y pense. The one who loses an auction is called the winner, and the one who wins is called the auctioneer. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Doug Chadwick Date: 16 Oct 20 - 03:55 AM "It's not for me, it's for all of us" is said by the person receiving the honour, not by those looking on. DC |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: BobL Date: 16 Oct 20 - 03:40 AM Never... ... be afraid to laugh at yourself, after all, you could be missing out on the joke of the century -- Dame Edna Everage. ... believe everything you think. ... do card tricks for the group you play poker with. ... feed the cat anything that doesn't match the carpet. ... stand between the dog and the lamppost -- Les Barker. ... test the depth of the water with both feet. ... under any circumstances take a sleeping pill and a laxative on the same night. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Pappy Fiddle Date: 16 Oct 20 - 12:15 AM Break the heart of complacency and smack the ass of adventure. < Jonny Ox When you see a place that's really lush and green, there's usually a reason for it. < Woody Brison, after living in Oregon for a year He who has money can eat sherbet in hell. < Lebanese proverb. What the boss don't know, the boss won't mind < Anaïs Mitchell? |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,.gargoyle Date: 15 Oct 20 - 09:33 PM James Thurber "Unicorn in the Garden" "You are a booby, and you belong in a booby-hatch. > |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Joe_F Date: 15 Oct 20 - 08:52 PM If you will not while you may, you shall not when you will. Investing is not the same as gambling, and downtown is not the same as uptown. It is a great thing to die in your own bed, though it is better still to die in your boots. Eager to please, and a nuisance. Easy to please, and a comfort. Big prizes make many losers. Thou shalt not follow a multitude to do evil. And always remember, the longer you live, The sooner you bloody well die. To be born is to fall down the chimney of a strange house. The temptation in business, politics, and public health is to judge everything by one number. Wealth adds to strength, but multiplies weakness. To do good is virtuous, and to wish good to be done is amiable, but to wish to do good is as vain as it is vain. Never being in love is like never being in debt. If you never do anything stupid, you're not as smart as you think. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Steve Shaw Date: 15 Oct 20 - 06:59 PM Is making up stuff just for the sake of posting "folklore?" |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Donuel Date: 15 Oct 20 - 06:46 PM Its better to be a fruit than a vegetable. Republican moral courage is more rare than a fossilized bible. It is noble to be good, and it is nobler still to just teach others to be good -- and more fun too. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,Nick Dow Date: 14 Oct 20 - 07:33 PM That's the thing about death. It severely limits your future. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Mrrzy Date: 14 Oct 20 - 04:24 PM And "you're" dead. Another Les Barker: always borrow from pessimists. They don't expect it back. |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: GUEST,Nick Dow Date: 14 Oct 20 - 04:08 PM After 34 years working as a radio presenter for the BBC I am aware of certain incontrovertible laws. This also works for other corporate sectors. The first myth of management is that it exists. Instructions to managers. 1. When in doubt mumble 2. Always write something down this indicates you have been working. 3. Always carry a clipboard and a serious expression. 4. If faced with a question you cannot answer-paraphrase the question back to the worker with a look of incredulous contempt. 5. It's never your fault. 6. Always keep the office door shut, this puts people on the defensive. 7. Admit to small faults to hide the bigger ones. 8. If you are clueless about the job in hand, simply say ' Great work Carry on!' with a satisfied smile. You will climb the corporate ladder, which probably explains why I presented the same programme for three decades! |
Subject: RE: Folklore: modern proverb From: Jack Campin Date: 14 Oct 20 - 12:38 PM That one is from the software engineering guru Frederick Brooks - he quotes it in his book "The Mythical Man-Month" (dunno if he invented it). |
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