Sugarcoating Quotes

Quotes tagged as "sugarcoating" Showing 1-7 of 7
Suzanne Collins
“Anyway, even if she's sugarcoating my good points, I appreciate it. Frankly, I could use a little sugarcoating.”
Suzanne Collins, Mockingjay

Colleen Hoover
“Miles backs up a step and turns so that he can face Dillon and Corbin at the same time. His eyes remain locked hard with Dillon's. "He's trying to fuck your sister."

Jesus Christ, Miles. Ever hear of sugarcoating?”
Colleen Hoover, Ugly Love

Alaric Hutchinson
“Conflict forces us to be fully present because it shatters our ego – stripping away all hope of escape or sugar coating. It removes everything that is nonessential to our authentic being; it removes all superficial layers. Conflict is painful because it wakes us up out of our created illusions. And if we lean into it, conflict can be the catalyst to our enlightenment.”
Alaric Hutchinson

Criss Jami
“In societies where coolness and being cool is a top priority, the religious replace the word 'religious' with 'spiritual' to make their faiths seem less extreme.”
Criss Jami, Killosophy

Alaric Hutchinson
“Your sweet-toting and sugarcoating is of no service to anyone! Do not sugarcoat reality; it only gives the people in your life a sweet-tooth that then makes it more challenging for them to later bite down on the hardness of life. Do not tote and tout sweets either – you’re malnourishing people! Instead give them the truth. What is the truth you may ask? Authentic expression of who you really are, how you really feel, without projecting the labels of right or wrong.”
Alaric Hutchinson

Bethany Turner
“But don't try to sugarcoat this."
"But that's what I do. I coat things with sugar." I reached behind me and grabbed the plate of vanilla doughnut drops, then held them in front of me with an innocent smile. "That's how I make friends.”
Bethany Turner, Hadley Beckett's Next Dish

Sarah Addison Allen
“History is known for sugar-coating. Sometimes it's the only thing that can make it palatable. So it can come as no surprise that even on Mallow Island, South Carolina, the past is not as sweet as the name suggests.”
Sarah Addison Allen, Other Birds: A Novel