Keeping quiet means being without any techniques, effort or intention to meditate... not following the thought stream.
Keeping politics out of the courtroom is a goal every state aspires to achieve.
Keeping players happy is not easy and I think anyone with a big squad will tell you that.
Keeping physical items from the past is important -- we keep old toys, grandparents' jewelry, yearbooks, dance recital programs -- and we assign meaning to them. Those items become the memories, and that's a very healthy thing to do. The problems occur when we have too many of those sentimental items, and they start weighing us down.
Keeping perspective and being happy and being energetic and being creative -- that's all tied to being healthy.
Keeping people neurotic and depressed and ignorant and self-doubting is oppressive.
Keeping people fired up starts with having a really clear vision for what the company is aiming to do.
Keeping passion at bay or surrendering blindly to it -- which of these two attitudes is the least destructive?
Keeping our kids engaged and in school must become a national priority.
Keeping our eyes on journey's end is what we need -- the place where we see at last the world that is greater than the world, the new creation that cannot be contained in present thought or social order or piety.
Keeping our children safe is not only an area where both political parties can find common ground, but as lawmakers, it is our moral obligation.
Keeping our agricultural sector strong and secure should be a bipartisan concern.
Keeping one's eyes open, listening, watching, being quiet, adopting some of the techniques of the psychoanalyst in talking to people, will bring you that surface from which something more comes.
Keeping off wheat helps my energy levels.
Keeping my emotions in check translates to me playing a lot better.
Keeping kids safe is sometimes a delusion. The world is a perilous place. Sometimes the kitchen is a perilous place.
Keeping it simple for the consumer is incredibly dire.
Keeping it real is the key and I don't know how they've done that week after week. I think the key is that everybody can sort of empathize with The Office.
Keeping it all together as a modern woman means multitasking, especially when you work. I think you always need to try your best, but at the same time you can only do what you can do, and you don't need to beat yourself up about it. I'm not white-picket-fence perfect.