Forbes Asia — October 2017

(Marcin) #1
“A SLUGGARD’S APPETITE IS NEVER FILLED, BUT THE
DESIRES OF THE DILIGENT ARE FULLY SATISFIED.”
—PROVERBS 13:4

“Office life typically
proceeds behind
a mask of shallow
cheerfulness, leaving
workers grievously
unprepared to
handle the fury and
sadness continually
aroused by their
colleagues.”
—ALAIN DE BOTTON

FINAL
THOUGHT
“Fill today with
work; fill tomorrow
with hope.”
—B.C. FORBES

THOUGHTS ON


CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: MONDADORI PORTFOLIO/GETTY IMAGES; ULF ANDERSEN/GETTY IMAGES; CULTURE CLUB/GETTY IMAGES; HOWARD SOCHURE

K/THE LIFE

PICTURE COLLECTION/GETTY IMAGES; JOHN SPRINGER COLLECTION/CORBIS/CORBIS/GETTY IMAGES; DAVE PICKOFF/AP; ANN RONAN PICTURES/PRINT

COLLECTOR/GETTY

IMAGES; MOVIESTORE COLLECTION/ALAMY; PRISMA/UIG/GETTY IMAGES;WOLVERHAMPTON CITY COUNCIL/ARTS AND HERITAGE/ALAMY

“ALL LABOR


HAS DIGNITY.”
—MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.

“People don’t
choose their
careers—they are
engulfed by them.”
—JOHN DOS PASSOS

SOURCES: NOBODY KNOWS MY NAME, BY JAMES BALDWIN; THE ALGONQUIN WITS, BY ROBERT E. DRENNAN;
THE TIMES BOOK OF QUOTATIONS; THE WAY OF ALL FLESH, BY SAMUEL BUTLER; DON QUIXOTE, BY MIGUEL DE
CERVANTES; THE PLEASURES AND SORROWS OF WORK, BY ALAIN DE BOTTON; ESSAYS, BY FRANK MOORE COLBY;
THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MARTIN LUTHER KING JR.

Wo r k


80 | FORBES ASIA OCTOBER 2017


“THIS BECAME A CREDO
OF MINE: ATTEMPT THE
IMPOSSIBLE IN ORDER TO
IMPROVE YOUR WORK.”
—BETTE DAVIS

“Every man’s work, whether
it be literature or music or
pictures or architecture or
anything else, is always a
portrait of himself.”
—SAMUEL BUTLER

“THE THREE MOST
HARMFUL ADDICTIONS
ARE HEROIN,
CARBOHYDRATES AND
A MONTHLY SALARY.”
—NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB

“HOW CAN I TAKE
AN INTEREST IN
MY WORK WHEN
I DON’T LIKE IT?”
—FRANCIS BACON

“The price
one pays for
pursuing any
profession
or calling is
an intimate
knowledge of
its ugly side.”
—JAMES BALDWIN

“DILIGENCE IS THE MOTHER OF GOOD
FORTUNE, AND THE GOAL OF A GOOD
INTENTION WAS NEVER REACHED THROUGH
ITS OPPOSITE, LAZINESS.”
—MIGUEL DE CERVANTES

“One never notices
what has been done;
one can only see what
remains to be done.”
—MARIE CURIE

“I HAVE FOUND
SOME OF THE
BEST REASONS
I EVER HAD FOR
REMAINING AT
THE BOTTOM
SIMPLY BY
LOOKING AT THE
MEN AT THE TOP.”
—FRANK MOORE COLBY

“Anyone can do
any amount of
work, provided
it isn’t the work
he is supposed
to be doing at
the moment.”
—ROBERT BENCHLEY
Free download pdf