1.
Progress is more plausibly judged by the reduction of deprivation than by the further enrichment of the opulent
Amartya Sen
Advancement is better evaluated by the alleviation of impoverishment than by furthering the wealth of the affluent.
2.
Deprivation is for me what daffodils were for Wordsworth.
Philip Larkin
4.
There is no such thing as sleep deprivation, there is only caffeine deficiency.
Richard Simmons
5.
Love in the form of longing and deprivation lowers the self regard.
Sigmund Freud
6.
This lifestyle is not about deprivation. It's about living inspired.
Gene Baur
7.
Where is there beauty when you see deprivation and starvation?
Rosalind Russell
10.
Every time we buy something we deepen our emotional deprivation and hence our need to buy something.
Philip Slater
11.
Frugality without creativity is deprivation.
Amy Dacyczyn
12.
Those who are one with deprivation are deprived of deprivation.
Laozi
13.
Love is an intermediate state between possession and deprivation.
Plato
14.
South Dakota... is like the world's first drive-through sensory deprivation chamber.
Bill Bryson
15.
Inactivity and deprivation of all accustomed stimulus is not rest; it is a preparation for the tomb
Robertson Davies
16.
Making money is marvelous, and I love doing it, and I do it reasonably well, but it doesnt have the gripping vitality that you have when you deal with the happiness of human life and with human deprivation.
Edgar Bronfman, Sr.
17.
Awareness, not deprivation, informs what you eat. Presence, not shame, changes how you see yourself and what you rely on.
Geneen Roth
18.
Instead of looking at difficulties as deprivations, we can learn to recognize them as opportunities for deepening and widening our love.
Eknath Easwaran
19.
a steady diet of mass culture is a form of deprivation.
Pauline Kael
20.
You must learn to control your money, or to the permanent deprivation control you
Dave Ramsey
21.
Deprivation sometimes can be one of the most marvelous teachers.
Michele Bachmann
22.
It's deprivation that makes people writers, if they have it in them to be a writer.
William Maxwell
23.
Sullen monosyllabism, a sure sign of sleep deprivation.
Jim Butcher
24.
It was as if the sensory overload that is American life had somehow led to sensory deprivation, a gilded weariness, where everything is permitted and nothing appreciated.
J. Maarten Troost