Fork In The Road Quotes by John Larroquette, Mike DeWine, Yogi Berra, John C. Maxwell, Rachel Carson, Marjorie Celona and many others.

The sad fact is that the vast majority of drunks stay drunks. There’s a small minority of us who reach that fork in the road where one side says ‘live’ and the other says ‘drink’.
On every journey you take, you are met with options. At every fork in the road, you make a choice. These are the decisions that shape your life.
If you don’t know where you are going, you might wind up someplace else.
Every major difficulty you face in life is a fork in the road. You choose which track you will head down, toward breakdown or breakthrough.
The road we have long been traveling is deceptively easy, a smooth superhighway on which we progress with great speed, but at its end lies disaster.
Y. That perfect letter. The wishbone, fork in the road, empty wineglass. The question we ask over and over.
I’m always fascinated by people when they reach that fork in the road, where they can make a moral choice.
This fork in the road happens over a hundred times a day, and it’s the choices that you make that will determine the shape of your life.
One of the most important things that I have learned in my 57 years is that life is all about choices. On every journey you take, you face choices. At every fork in the road, you make a choice. And it is those decisions that shape our lives.
If you don’t know where you’re going any road will do
I always thought I was going to end up teaching ninth grade, specifically, because I had a lot of really formative influences, I think, at that fork in the road, where a lot of crucial decisions are made by young folks.
One way to find food for thought is to use the fork in the road, the bifurcation that marks the place of emergence in which a new line of development begins to branch off.
A man must know his destiny. if he does not recognize it, then he is lost.
I really didn’t say everything I said.
As you go through life, there are thousands of little forks in the road, and there are a few really big forks-those moments of reckoning, moments of truth.
A dozen times a day we come to a fork in the road and must decide which way we will go. It is important to get our ultimate objectives clearly in mind so that we do not become distracted at each fork in the road by the irrelevant questions: Which is the easier or more pleasant way? Or, Which way are others going?
If you don t know where you are, a map won’t help.