By Alexander Ryazantsev
- If you are abrupt and haughty, you will be despised by all.
- Be polite and modest in your dealings with all people.
- Do not promise if you are not certain of your ability to follow through.
- Carry yourself simply, with dignity, but without exquisiteness.
- Be concise, accurate and tactful always, with all and everywhere.
- Be considerate and attentive but not intrusive and adulatory. Know how to leave in a timely manner and not be unwanted.
- It is necessary to remember the boundary where dignified politeness ends and where sycophancy begins.
- Do not carouse, as this will not prove one brave but rather likely compromise you.
- Do be in a hurry to get familiar with someone you do not know well.
- Avoid keeping financial tabs for friends. Money always spoils relations.
- If you can, help out your comrade with money, but personally avoid accepting money, as it will demean you.
- If you cannot say anything nice about someone, also refrain from saying anything bad if you happen to know of such.
- Do not dismiss the advice of others – hear it out. You will always have the option to deciding whether to heed it.
- Knowing how to use the good advice of others is an art no less useful than being able to provide good advice yourself.
- Honor fortifies the heart and ennobles bravery.
- Safeguard the reputation of any woman who has confided in you, regardless of who she is.
- There are times in life when one must forget the heart and heed reason.
- Be guided by instinct, a sense of fairness and duty to decency.
- Always be on guard and never slack off.
- May your words be soft but arguments be strong. Try to convince rather than annoy one’s opponent.
- When speaking avoid gesticulation and raising one’s voice.
- There is nothing worse than indecisiveness. A bad decision is better than hesitancy and inaction.
- A moment lost can never be returned.
- The person who is not afraid is more powerful than the person whom everyone fears.
- When two people quarrel, they are always both wrong.
- The greatest delusions are those which go unquestioned.
- There is wisdom in keeping silent.
- Modesty is not about being indifferent to praise so much as it is being attentive to reprimands.
Source: Russian Mir Foundation
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