Tuesday 11 December 2012

Some Family Quotes



Family quotes remind us the love, affection, dedication, trust and believe on others.Sometimes these family quotes can make your loved one happy. Let’s have a look on some family quotes:
Evan Esar, an American humorist writer, said in one of his family quote "A social unit where the father is concerned with parking space, the children with outer space, and the mother with closet space."


Phyllis Diller, a comedian actress, said "Cleaning your house while your children are still growing is like shoveling the walk before it stops snowing." 

Life is full of tensions and everyone here wants to be happy and joyful. People love those who make them happy. So, these funny family quotes can bring people towards you because of the fun created by quoting some funny quotes.

Sometimes people remind memories of their childhood and wish to have that lovely period again. Childhood is one of the best part of human life no matter how hardship a man had seen in his/her childhood but he/she must love it when he think about it.Let’s read some funny family quotes:



Erma Bombeck, an American humorist,remind her childhood and quote in a funny mode “We were a strange little band of characters trudging through life sharing diseases and toothpaste, coveting one another's desserts, hiding shampoo, borrowing money, locking each other out of our rooms, inflicting pain and kissing to heal it in the same instant, loving, laughing, defending, and trying to figure out the common thread that bound us all together.”

Rosaleen Dickson quotes “Whatever they grow up to be, they are still our children, and the one most important of all the things we can give to them is unconditional love. Not a love that depends on anything at all except that they are our children.”

But some people become sad and express their hardships of childhood time. But with confidently, they tell us how they independently tackle those hardships. Pearl S. Buck a writer quotes ‘The lack of emotional security of our American young people is due, I believe, to their isolation from the larger family unit.  No two people - no mere father and mother - as I have often said, are enough to provide emotional security for a child.  He needs to feel himself one in a world of kinfolk, persons of variety in age and temperament, and yet allied to himself by an indissoluble bond which he cannot break if he could, for nature has welded him into it before he was born.’