Quotes about Recreation
Relaxation and Recreation The most relaxing recreating forces are a healthy religion, sleep, music, and laughter. Have faith in God—learn to sleep well— Love good music—see the funny side of life— And health and happiness will be yours.
— Dale Carnegie
Build traditions of family vacations and trips and outings. These memories will never be forgotten by your children.
— Ezra Taft Benson
The most successful people I know create superior results yet still maintain a balance among work, family, and recreation in their lives.
— Jack Canfield
Families must spend more time together in work and recreation.
— Ezra Taft Benson
A holiday would be a poor thing indeed without a great deal of game playing!
— Catherine Marshall
Fiction is to the grown man what play is to the child; it is there that he changes the atmosphere and tenor of his life.
— Robert Louis Stevenson
We are one, after all, you and I, together we suffer, together exist and forever will recreate one another.
— Pierre Teilhard de Chardin
We can let ourselves enjoy life. If we want something and can afford it, buy it. If we want to do something that is legal and harmless, do it. When we're actually involved with doing something that is recreational, don't find ways to feel bad. Let go and enjoy life.
— Melody Beattie
The Bible describes a God who is a thousand things to His children, even though some of these are beyond our ability to understand. So when people insist on humanly reasonable theologies to satisfy their need to believe, the lesser god they're buying is not the God of Scripture. We must beware of recreating an image of God that makes us feel better.
— Beth Moore
If man places his faith in a god he has recreated in his own image, has he placed his faith in God at all? And if not, how can such a man be saved?
— Beth Moore
Let us seek to extend the present life to the uttermost by observing every law of health, and by properly balancing labor, study, rest and recreation.
— Brigham Young
If worldly things "be but as a dream, the thought is not far off that there may be an awakening to what is real. When he speaks of death as a necessary change, and points out that nothing useful and profitable can be brought about without change, did he perhaps think of the change in a corn of wheat, which is not quickened except it die? Nature's marvellous power of recreating out of Corruption is surely not confined to bodily things.
— Marcus Aurelius