I want to feel my life while I'm in it.

I feel 80% of my life is completely normal.

All my life I feel like I haven't been heard.

I feel there is this looming cloud over my life.

I've feel like I've been doing TV shows most of my life.

I feel very lucky, I feel my life is a never-ending privilege.

I feel the most centered in my life when I'm performing a song.

I feel most akin as an artist, in my life and my career, to Agatha Christie.

I'm really judgmental, especially about things that I feel make my life harder.

I feel like, throughout lots of my life, especially growing up, I felt powerless.

I feel I should be trying to complete my life, whatever 'completing a life' means.

I feel like my life has been a series of miracles. I was in every sense a lost cause.

My life is what a salmon must feel like. They are always going upstream, against the current.

I feel that the most rewarding thing I have ever done in my life is to be associated with UNICEF.

I don't feel my capabilities in cookery are as big as my desire - as with so many aspects of my life.

I feel as though my life is bathed in golden sunlight. And the really wonderful thing is that I know it.

I don't feel that I wanted to spend my whole writing life - which is my life - writing detective stories.

My life is actually empty, so I feel like I'm lying to everyone by pretending to be happy on the outside.

I mean, I feel like you get more bees with honey. But that doesn't mean I don't get frustrated in my life.

Running is the one part of my life in which I fundamentally feel like the observer instead of the observed.

I like pretty things around. I like it to be prissed up. Then I feel at least something is sane in my life.

I don't care about what nobody say or how nobody feel. I'm happy, I'm living my life, and that's what it is.

My goal is to play characters that I feel I can contribute to and also ones I can contribute back to my life.

I can feel the public side of my life and the private side of my life sort of drifting away from one another.

I started doing improv when I was 8 years old, so it's always been in my life. I would feel naked without it.

I feel like I've known Hunter S. Thompson for most of my life. I first encountered him in 1981, when I was 12.

I don't feel like a pop star. I like being able to live my life the same as my mates. I don't get recognised much.

I feel every project that I have done in my life, which is acting oriented, has been something that I believed in.

I feel matured in a way that I'm happy about. I'm at this other stage in my life - and it's not a bad thing at all.

I feel enough distance from the person I used to be. I'm not ashamed about my life anymore, because I've learnt from it.

I have never smuggled anything in my life. Why, then, do I feel an uneasy sense of guilt on approaching a customs barrier?

I grew up in Essex, and all my life I wanted to live in London - now I do. I feel very privileged to be able to live here.

I feel like my life is pretty much on display. So much of it is working, and that's really all I want to do. I'm an open book.

Sometimes, I feel like I spent the first part of my life wishing to be a teen-age boy, and the second part condemned to being one.

Finding the one is not just a feeling, it's an educated guess. I feel like I chose someone to share my life with who is my friend.

I don't feel like consistency is in my life at all, but I honestly wouldn't have it any other way because it keeps my life interesting.

I like the idea of being alone. I like the idea of often being alone in all aspects of my life. I like to feel lonely. I like to need things.

I've had a lot of highs in my life and a lot of lows, some pivotal experiences, and in ways I feel like I've already lived a couple of lives.

Never be ashamed of what you feel. You have the right to feel any emotion that you want, and to do what makes you happy. That's my life motto.

So much about religion has to do with rigid, sacrosanct preciousness. I don't live my life that way, and I don't feel that's what Baha'u'llah teaches.

I feel a little schizophrenic because my life is so totally different from here, obviously. And the French values are so different from American values.

Most of my life I didn't feel very normal. There's definitely been some moments where I feel like, all right, I've finally graduated and I'm a normal lady.

I've played Big Bird for over half my life, and now I'm in my 80s. It does feel older than 79. Someone said it's just a number, and I said, 'No, I genuinely feel older.'

I never really wanted to write a book in the first place. Never intended to do such. I feel like I wasted a lot of my life, so I didn't feel like it was worthy of a book.

You just decide what your values are in life and what you are going to do, and then you feel like you count, and that makes life worth living. It makes my life meaningful.

'Nothin' on You' changed my life: I finally feel that I reached the point where I wanna be at. At times I questioned whether it was worth the sacrifice, but now I see it was.

I feel simultaneously completely vulnerable and made wholly brave by becoming a parent. It has changed the way that I live my life. Because I want to be an example for my son.

I don't really see how any song can not feel contrived if it isn't honest, and how could I write honest songs if I don't write about stuff going on in my life and how I'm feeling?

Musically, I have my project, '30058.' It's seven songs, like an EP or mixtape, but I call it a soundtrack because I feel like my life is a movie, and all the songs are moments in my life.

In my life, I wanted to feel tall. I wanted to be somebody. I wanted to be tall as the Sears Tower. I wanted to be on top of the Sears Tower. I wanted to be as strong as the Sears Tower feels.

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