Small business owners and entrepreneurs are almost always working, whether they're in the office or not. And millennials are the least likely generation to use their vacation time.
But is it possible that taking time off and resting is better for your business? Here are 15 quotes from famous authors, poets, and speakers on why time away from work is just as important to your bottom line.
Featuring quotes from Mark Twain, Maya Angelou, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Plato, Dr. Seuss, Thomas Aquinas, and more.
2. “Each person deserves a
day away in which no
problems are confronted,
no solutions searched for.
Each of us needs to withdraw
from the cares which will
not withdraw from us.”
― Maya Angelou
3. “You can discover more about
a person in an hour of play than
in a year of conversation.”
― Plato
4. “There is virtue in work and there is virtue in rest.
Use both and overlook neither.”
― Alan Cohen
8. “All that is important comes in
quietness and waiting.”
― Patrick Lindsay
9. “A little nonsense now and then,
is cherished by the wisest men.”
― Roald Dahl
10. “Have regular hours
for work and play;
make each day both
useful and pleasant,
and prove that you
understand the
worth of time by
employing it well.”
― Louisa May Alcott
11. “Your calm mind is the ultimate weapon
against your challenges.
So relax.”
― Bryant McGill
12. “And the night shall
be filled with music,
And the cares,
that infest the day,
Shall fold their tents,
like the Arabs,
And as silently
steal away.”
― Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
13. “Now this relaxation of the
mind from work consists on
playful words or deeds.
Therefore it becomes a
wise and virtuous man to
have recourse to such
things at times.”
― Thomas Aquinas
14. “Rest is not idleness, and to lie
sometimes on the grass under trees
on a summer's day, listening to the
murmur of the water, or watching the
clouds float across the sky, is by no
means a waste of time.”
― John Lubbock, The Use Of Life
15. “It does good also to take walks
out of doors, that our spirits may
be raised and refreshed by the
open air and fresh breeze...”
― Seneca