Dry Erase Wall Quotes for July 2023
These quotes for July can be a part of your daily time for reflection. Write them down on your dry erase wall and in your daily planner. Journal about them and add attractive artwork, or memorize some of them to use as a kind of mantra when you want food for thought or a mental pick-me-up.
Why July is the Best Month of the Year
“July is the best month of the year because it is a prime vacation
month with the best warm weather of the year. And 4th of July is the
best party of the year because it lasts all day. July is a month of fun
and celebration. And most especially, it is the month of kings and
queens.”
– Yankyboy (via ng.opera.news)
“The weather in July is known for its heat, yet it is my favorite
time of year because of how warm it is. In the mornings, you do not even
need a jacket, and the nights seem close to the perfect weather. It is
the best time for night swimming and late-night drives with the windows
down.”
– Angelina Pranger
“July is the prime month of summer, sandwiched between the other main
months of summer. The stormy June days are over, and nothing but long,
dry, hot days are ahead. July is prime time for heavenly days at the
beach or at the pool.”
– Jill Augustine
“July allows for the water temperatures to finally not cause you physical pain from stepping into the cold ocean.”
– Caroline Laurendeau
“There are no huge holidays in July, and you do not have to worry
about gathering the whole family or buying gifts for other people.
Instead, you can use your hard-earned money on vacations!”
– Jill Augustine
“July is the best vacation month with the warmest weather of the year.”
– Caroline Laurendeau
“July is the seventh month of the Gregorian calendar. As we’re at the
beginning of the second half of the year, it’s a great time to start on
a new foot. It’s also a great point to start working on any of those
New Year’s resolutions that you’ve put off attempting for the first half
of the year!”
– Shash Wighton
“Welcome, July! In the remaining half-year, we must fly to reach high.”
— Vaidesh Vardanth
“Summer often brings back nostalgic memories of days long gone. For
many years, July meant long, hot days where the sun stayed up late;
celebrating the Fourth of July with barbeques and fireworks; swimming,
bike riding, and playing outside.”
– Sckylar Gibby-Brown
“Here we are … July. The days are hot and very long. It feels like every day should be an endless vacation.”
– Julie Hage
“July first begins the second half of the year, which means you have
plenty of time to do amazing things before that annual calendar changes
to the next year.”
– Julie Hage
“July is the month that lies directly in the middle of the summer.
The days are longer, the weather is warmer, and most people’s skin is
tanner unless you’ve been blessed with the ever-so-classic Irish skin.
The smell of SPF 30 is the new perfume, and your daily attire consists
of a bathing suit and your summer feet to help you get across the hot
pavement.”
– Caroline Laurendeau
Why it’s Good to be Born in July “What’s the best month to have a
birthday? Making the case for July: it’s the first proper month of
summer, and this unlocks new possibilities: gardens, rooftops, swimming
pools, paddling pools, whatever.”
– thetab.com
“July babies, science has found, are less likely to develop recurring
health issues, potentially due to July mothers being exposed to plenty
of seasonal sun during the months leading up to giving birth, as well as
the babies themselves catching plenty of summer rays during their
youngest, most formative months.”
– Jonathon Rowe
“July babies are as sunny as their birth month. Researchers find a
correlation between babies born in July and their outlook on life later
on. It turns out that July babies have a higher rate of ‘sunny
dispositions’ and a lower risk of developing mood disorders including
depression as adults.”
– happiestbaby.com
“Babies with July birthdays have been found to grow taller than those born in the fall or winter.”
– Jonathon Rowe
“Research demonstrates that those with July birthdays often possess
especially positive life attitudes and, consequently, face a lower risk
of depression as adults.”
– Jonathon Rowe
“Summer babies are already pretty lucky. They don’t have to worry
about their birthday parties being overshadowed by major holidays, plus
there’s all that gorgeous weather! But July babies are especially lucky.
July babies may have some advantages thanks to all that extra sunlight
giving them vitamin D in their tender first months, which helps them to
grow up healthier and even taller.”
– happiestbaby.com
“July babies are known to be born comedians, so smiles won’t be far
behind, even on grumpy days. And, astrologically speaking, babies born
in July are known to be devoted family members.”
– tinybeans.com
“People born in July always look at the brighter side of everything.
If there are a hundred things going haywire around them, you will see
them smiling at the one thing that might be going right. In fact,
research suggests that these people see a glass always half full and
have a tendency to be ‘excessively positive.'”
– timesofindia.indiatimes.com
“Babies born in July are often ambitious but generous. They often
inspire others and tend to take charge in the workplace, all traits of a
good leader.”
– tinybeans.com
“For reasons unclear, July folks appear to have some protection from
various diseases, including cardiovascular and reproductive disorders as
well as ADHD, asthma, and ear infections.”
– tinybeans.com
Facts and Folklore about July
“July’s first birth flower, the larkspur, is a vivid annual that
blooms abundantly in the Northern Hemisphere and high-elevation areas of
the African tropics. Larkspurs grow from several inches to several feet
and in shades that have come to represent certain qualities: A blue
bloom embodies grace and dignity, purple symbolizes a first love, white
stands for joy and rebirth, and pink signifies classic romance.
Larkspurs of all colors have long been considered sources of positive
energy.”
– Jonathon Rowe
“If you’re doing everything right, then crops of corn are meant to be
‘knee-high by the fourth of July.’ It’s also in July that crop circles
start to appear in fields of corn.”
– Shash Wighton
“If ant hills are high in July, the coming winter will be hard.”
– The Old Farmer’s Almanac
“If you live in the northern hemisphere, you might not like July.
It’s hot, and it’s uncomfortable, but that’s just how summer is.
Wherever in the world you live, though, rejoice – the year is halfway
over already!”
– Shash Wighton
“If the 1st of July be rainy weather, it will rain more or less for three weeks together.”
– Anonymous
“Ne’er trust a July sky.”
– The Old Farmer’s Almanac
“Whatever July and August do not boil, September cannot fry.”
– The Old Farmer’s Almanac
“Traditionally, July tends to have one of the highest birth rates and some of the most common birthdays are in July.”
– happiestbaby.com
“July 3rd marks the beginning of the “Dog Days of Summer,” the period
between July 3rd and August 11th when the Sun occupies the same region
of the sky as Sirius, the Dog Star. It was once believed that due to the
star’s position at this time of year, it somehow conspired with the Sun
to make the days hotter!”
– The Old Farmer’s Almanac
“The month of July is named after famed Roman leader Julius Caesar,
whose birthday is attributed to July 12 or 13, but he’s not the only
influential person who celebrated a birthday in July. Other notable July
babies include Nelson Mandela (July 18), Princess Diana (July 1),
Jackie Kennedy (July 28), and four past US presidents
– John Quincy Adams, Calvin Coolidge, Gerald Ford, and George W. Bush.”
– mother.ly
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