Style is innate to who I am. My father gave me a picture the other day. I must have been about seven, and I had on wing-tip shoes and some cool pants. I thought, 'Wow!'
People don't need to necessarily see me in the jersey to understand who I am and what message I'm trying to get across with the things that I'm marketing.
I know who I am and what kind of teammate I've always been.
I'm just learning who I am and how relationships work and how to make them function. No different from anyone else.
I think my biggest learning experience is that it’s okay to be who you are - you don’t have to exactly fit the mold of what people think a certain kind of career is. I think that discovery - of really knowing who I am and being okay with that and loving myself - was amazing.
I feel like I'm truly and genuinely proud and unafraid. I'm not scared of who I am.
When I meet girls, I pray that they don't know who I am. But I know that's limiting myself quite a lot.
If you don't read, I don't know how to communicate with you...I can never express who I am in my own words as powerfully as my books can.
I don't know that I'm beautiful or glamorous. I'm a pretty artificial looking person. I sure am flattered when people think I'm beautiful, but I think I'm leaning towards more cartoonish than beautiful. But I'm comfortable with who I am. And since I wasn't born as a natural beauty, I just make the most of what I've got.
I'm very secure about my talents and about who I am.
I know who I am, I know what I can and can't do. I know what I will and won't do. I know what I'm capable of and I don't agree to do things that I don't think I can pull off.
I would rather have 10 people working on a record that are really committed and believe in it and love it, than 50 people who have no idea who I am or what I'm for.
I have been consistent by staying true to who I am and will continue to sing the type of songs that those who have continued to support my career expect from me.
I obviously don't feel under pressure to look young, because I have had no Botox or surgery. I don't judge people who choose to have it, but I don't want to erase who I am.
Wear scarlet! Tear the green lemons off the tree! I don't want to forget who I am, what has burned in me, and hang limp and clean, an empty dress -
What, I'm supposed to succumb to your ideal image of what this is? No. I'm gonna stand above that and I'm gonna be who I am and be a rolemodel for these girls.
I wouldn't do anything different. Every mistake and every success made me the person I am today. And I am proud of who I am.
I've chosen to stay in a jolly place for most of my life, and that is a lot of who I am.
People want to know more about me. They want to know who I am.
I didn't go into 'Rabbit Hole' wanting to write about class. I think because of who I am it somehow found its way into it.
I have no more idea now of who I am than I did before. But at least I know that. And I'm starting to figure out who I want to be.
The gun becomes this psychological totem, this thing of who I am. And it's almost as if using the gun is going to be the thing that's going to be my expression of how I make a difference in the world.
My whole family has been such a great support, and theyre the ones who have kept me grounded and allowed me to be who I am today.
I am who I am who I am who am I Requesting some enlightenment Could I have been anyone other than me?
In general, the few directors that I've worked with that I really respect have taught me a lot about who I am and they've opened me up as an actor. I want to take some of that to apply it to when I'm directing actors.