My Life Quotes
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I have an imagination because my life is so boring that my imagination lets me get off the reality of what's going on.
I don't think the federal government should be involved in making life work, right? I mean, the enumerated powers - the state level is fine. The local level's fine. But not - I do not want the federal government trying to make my life work.
I got real important relationships in my life that are very empowering relationships.
All of my life, I've been told no. That I was too poor, too short, too black. I enjoy it when people underestimate me.
I had done theater during high school and college, but with my life and everything I had going on, I decided to go for the health field, where there were stable jobs.
I have lived most of my life in Paris, but I have a connection with Rome that I have with no other place. I'm attached by invisible strings.
I don't recall having a gun. I really don't. I don't think I ever pulled a gun on anyone in my life.
I didn't want to be an actor. I wanted to design historical movies like 'Ben-Hur'. I saw this as my life.
My life has always somehow been played out in a minor key, unresolved. Art somehow resolves things for me.
I'm a person who always wanted to turn my life into an archive. Social media made my dream come true.
There are times where I'm like, 'I wish I can do this' or 'I wish I can be normal like this,' but with my life, I try to keep it normal.
I'm always going to have the puppets, probably not for the rest of my life, but I'm not going to stop doing ventriloquism anytime soon. I'm just going to add singing, recording songs, and maybe playing in a TV show.
I feel that the most rewarding thing I have ever done in my life is to be associated with UNICEF.
What I'm having is this conflict in my life right now, that in New York, I see my directing friends and I see acting friends and they've all got this level of passion about either or both of those directions that I've never really found myself having.
It wasn't until I could get out of Stanford that I could sit down and think about my life, to do the things that most kids do, which is to ask who am I, what do I want to be when I grow up. I never got to do Dan Pintauro.
I try to find where the fun is and go there and then get asked if I want to have more fun. That's the way I want my life to go. Follow the fun.
I think I have almost everything I could ever want. I have my family, and I have a lot of love in my life.
At some point in my life, before I was gone, I wanted to make an album, even if it was for no reason other than posterity.
I think I would have had less tumult in my life if I hadn't grown up in my particular house.
Music is as integral to me as my own DNA. My life has become a continual soundtrack, with music underscoring the most powerful and even the most banal moments of my life.
Directing is a very long process, and I have to be in love with it if I want to give up two years of my life and live with it from beginning to end!
I really enjoy doing stunts, especially. I had never done any stunt work, ever, in my life before, and in our first episode of 'Legacies,' I was doing a bunch.
I'm surprisingly practical in much of my life, but not when it comes to my shoes.
I was incredibly lucky that my first book found a large and loyal readership. It changed my life - from being a very withdrawn adult to living in Paris as a full-time writer. It has also given me enormous confidence.
I have never played the lottery in my life and never will. Voltaire described lotteries as a tax on stupidity. More specifically, I think, on innumeracy.
One of the lines from my books is about having respect for different minds, and if I had to have an epitaph at this point in my life, that would be it.
I'd met some awfully tough gals in my life, and I find them compelling, if I don't have to socialize with them too much.
People are very complex. And for a psychologist, you get fascinated by the complexity of human beings, and that is what I have lived with, you know, in my career all of my life, is the complexity of human beings.
I spent the first 22 years of my life absorbing everything, like a big disgusting cell, and now I'm disgorging it with jokes added out into the world. That's a really gross metaphor.
As I look back on the last few decades of my life, I am struck by the good fortune that came my way.
My confidence comes from knowing I do the right things in my life. I do the right things in the gym. I do the right things all together.
If I would have won that Olympic gold medal, I would have gotten a job somewhere coaching at a university, and I would be totally content with my life.
I was into basketball, but then once I found contact sports, it was over. I never played basketball again in my life.
I'm gonna live my life the correct way, and I'm gonna be a champion the kids look up to and hopefully aspire to be like.
I know in my life there's stuff that will come back because I haven't dealt with it, and it's the same with everybody.
Although I'm not from London originally: I moved down here when I was 16, so it's played a part in my life. It's where I've lived for all that time.
If I wanted to make spy movies for the rest of my life, that would be one thing, but I don't want to just make spy movies.
As a kid, I kind of spent my life being amazed by being tricked. I love being tricked. I still love it today.
My feelings of revulsion and foreboding about nuclear weapons had not changed an iota since 1945, and they have never left me. Since I was 14, the overriding objective of my life has been to prevent the occurrence of nuclear war.
Publication in 'The New Yorker' meant everything, and it's no exaggeration to say that it changed my life.
I loved wrestling in Philly. It was such an exciting time in my life. That really helped me grow and think differently. It was also just a lot of fun.
I love wrestling, and I love the entertainment aspect of wrestling, but the rest of my life, I just want to be able to live and enjoy my life. I don't want to be living it essentially for other people's entertainment.
I don't want to live my life to entertain other people. I have other things that I'd like to do.
I like having a bunch of different experiences. I don't want to do just one thing for the rest of my life.
Superman's always chasing after someone who just mugged somebody, and I've never seen that happen in my life.
I think it's harder than ever to be an artist. I think that you end up, especially as a middle-aged person, you pay such big consequences for saying, 'I'm just going to devote my life to making art,' or 'I'm going to devote my life to writing novels.' You end up with no resources.
That was one of the reasons I became a writer - I never really had that many friends. I would read a lot, and listen to music. And that was my life.
My husband is a musician. He cooks and he's a chef but he also, he makes basement recordings. So many people in my life make basement recordings, so I feel very lucky, I'm surrounded by very creative people.
All my life, I have been surrounded by the track. The week I was born, Dad took me to training. I do recall at some stage being pushed around in a pram on a track. I have a lot of inspiration from him. To see him carrying the Sydney Olympic torch really ignited my dream. As a coach, he knows the in and outs of race walking and technique.
When I was filming 'Premium Rush' in N.Y.C., I flew to L.A. to have a few general meetings. I sat down with Peter Cramer at Universal Studios and spoke about my life and career, and being that I'm such a goof, we spoke about how I really wanted to do a comedy next.
The love of my life found me! That's how he would say it, anyway, since he claims he was attracted to my energy before I even turned around.
I've never seen anything so abhorrent in my life as Harry Reid. He's an equal opportunity basher. He goes after everybody, and I think it has been so, frankly, disgusting.
I'm tired of living the vanilla, non-offensive life. I think that's a really sad way to spend my life, and I lived it like that because that's what I was brought up in, taught to not rock the ship.
I've been extremely fortunate in my life. So I actually believe that I'm the living embodiment of living the American dream.
Coming back to theatre is something I'm keen to do for the rest of my life. It recharges my batteries, so to speak.
I feel like my life has always been the 'Hey Look at Me Show.' I'm not apologetic about that.
One of the things I did to make myself feel better is that I kicked up my running even more. I knew that I had to stay active, that I had to keep living as if my life was actually going to unfold naturally because when you stop, when you freeze, and you think about it, that's when the demons come and can drag you down.
My favorite sport, frankly, is college football. I'm a college football junkie, even though I'm associated with golf and like golf and have played it all my life.
Thinking back, the majority of the conflicts I've had in my life have been a result of offering up my two unwelcome cents, crossing that line between constructive truth-telling and preaching.
I've been a Dolphin for 17 years, and I'll be a Dolphin for the rest of my life. That will never change.
Yes, I did shatter my leg, and it really changed my life, in a way. It wasn't much fun, but it did open me up, and as we all know intuitively, adversity can develop resources.
My life is as an artist, not an entertainer. I don't consider myself an entertainer, but I can do that thing when I want to.
I've never changed my life since I was 4 and went to the YMCA with a gym bag. I still have that philosophy. In fact, I still have that gym bag.
I traveled so much to dance that I feel a part of many places, but New York is where I spent most of my life and where my career has been - it's the place where I exist.
There are a lot of musicians in my life. But movies came first for me. That was my original passion.
I want to be a better person in every aspect. I really don't feel I've in anyway fulfilled my potential in every area of my life. But I'm optimistic.
I monetized my life so I never do anything that I don't like or that I'm not participating in 100 percent.
For the first five years of my life, things felt pretty good. A lot went wrong after that, family-wise.
I've had loss in my life, and I like to think my mother's energy lives on in some faintly Buddhist way. I do find some comfort there.
I don't use 'best friend' often especially with someone I've only known for a year but Louise Redknapp completely changed my life and the two of us became these kind of wonderful confidence boosters for one another.
It became my solace. Because it's the only thing structured in my life right now. Training is sort of a therapy session, I guess.
Early on in my life, I got two older brothers; we used to listen to Eminem, 50 Cent, Lil Wayne.
Everybody sees me now, and I'm the head coach at Clemson and this and that, but my life hasn't always been this way.
I was bullied in high school, and it's interesting coming from the other side of the camera lens, finding out that all of these people that I thought were my antagonists in my life were probably just as insecure as I was at that age.
What I do for exercise sort of depends on what's happening in the rest of my life.
In terms of sexual orientation I don't really feel I've changed. I don't feel there was a hidden part of my sexuality that I wasn't aware of. I'd been with men all my life, and I'd never fallen in love with a woman. But when I did, it didn't seem so strange.
I like to try to give something back to the community because I feel fortunate for how I was raised and how my life turned out. Each year, with the help of my brother, Grant, we run a charity golf tournament to raise money for the Ontario Federation for Cerebral Palsy.
For most of my life - well, maybe half of my life, but basically until I was in my mid-20s - I wrote stories. From the time I was 5 or 6 until I was 25. And I read a lot of stories during that time.
When I'm writing, I just kind of put myself in a place, in a certain time period in my life.
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