I've spent my life supporting myself.

There's no room in my life for feeling sorry for myself.

Gymnastics was my worth - it was my life - and I hated myself.

If my life is of no value to my friends it is of none to myself.

There is nothing in my life where I view myself as a 1920s person.

I'm extremely happy in my life. I consider myself to be very blessed.

All the muddy waters of my life cleared up when I gave myself to Christ.

My life motto is 'Do my best, so that I can't blame myself for anything.'

Like I said, TLC has enough of my life. I have to keep some of it for myself.

I have all my life fought against prejudice, having been subjected to it myself.

I have a lot of things to prove to myself. One is that I can live my life fearlessly.

I consider myself very lucky that I could live my life through all the ups and downs.

I call myself a traditionalist, although I have fought against tradition all my life.

All my life, I wanted to sound like myself. I never wanted to sound like anybody else.

I'm never in my life going to do a record that's a tribute to myself. I don't need it.

I don't take myself terribly seriously. It's why I can be incredibly honest about my life.

Maybe in my life I sort of put myself in situations that were chaotic, outside of my life.

I'm only speaking for myself, but having a kid has put everything else in my life in perspective.

I've been in a hurry all my life. I've been in a hurry to succeed, and in a hurry to prove myself.

I don't see myself as somebody special. I just see myself as Aaron, the same guy I've been all my life.

I knew that if-God forbid-anything ever happened in my life, I needed to know how to take care of myself.

I spent an awful lot of my life underestimating myself and, as a result, not exceeding my own expectations.

I don't describe myself as a Christian or religious, but I like to think that how I live my life is honest.

I myself have already spent a third of my life in Germany, first in Cologne and then, since 1994, in Berlin.

There was three or four years of my life where I hated myself and you know, would have quite happily ended it.

When I heard his first songs, Dylan was answering certain questions that I had all my life been asking myself.

Wrestling is not only my job, it's my life, so when I wasn't able to wrestle, I didn't know what to do with myself.

I've had plenty of crappy jobs, but the only job I've ever really dedicated myself to has been acting. It's my life.

If I were to live my life over again, I would be an American. I would steep myself in America, I would know no other land.

'What if?' is just about the worst question I can ask myself, and I want to avoid it at all costs for the rest of my life.

I do yoga and also cardio. And in between, I dance, stretch myself, there's no set rules. That applies to my life as well.

I share personal things about myself in the context of my interviews and in 'It's Messy' - but that's 20 percent of my life.

When Phish broke up, I made some comment about how I'm not gonna go around playing 'You Enjoy Myself' for the rest of my life.

I threw myself into the only thing I ever felt passionate about, the only thing that has ever saved my life, which is YouTube.

They saved my life but the accident was unavoidable so there was no point feeling sorry for myself. I just wanted to race again.

I don't see myself in terms of artifice. I see myself as a real person who chooses to live my life in an open way - artistically.

When I first climbed into a go-kart, aged 13, I thought to myself: 'This is what I want to do with my life, and I want to drive F1.'

I loved reading when I grew up but did feel totally invisible because I couldn't see myself and my life reflected in the books I was reading.

There are times in my life where I'm frantic and I think to myself, 'Okay, what would Raven do now?' As dumb as that sounds, it's in my head.

Do you know I used to pride myself on the fact that I'd never booked a show in my life, but that I'd played so many because I'd been invited?

When I'm trusting and being myself as fully as possible, everything in my life reflects this by falling into place easily, often miraculously.

I'm a military brat; my mother's a pastor. There's been a lot of order in my life that I don't have control over, that I just dedicate myself to.

I could go off into the wilderness and write fantasy novels for the rest of my life and probably be happy; but I always want to challenge myself.

I was very, very thrown by the fact that I had to make some big changes in my life in order to be myself, but under this kind of movie-star banner.

I don't know if I can see myself writing another 'Saw' film. It's such a special part of my life, and I almost don't want to ruin it by going back.

I've had a contemptuous relationship with authority throughout my life. I found myself at odds with authority, and I'm disdainful of blind authority.

I'd chosen to dedicate my life to writing, and I asked myself, 'if you write your whole life, and nobody ever sees a word, is it as a writer that you die?'

I say to myself that I shall try to make my life like an open fireplace, so that people may be warmed and cheered by it and so go out themselves to warm and cheer.

I had to know if I could make it somewhere else. I did not want to go through the rest of my life wondering what might have been without putting myself to the test.

Whatever dramas are going on in my life, I always find that place inside my head where I see myself as the cleanest, tallest, strongest, wisest person that I can be.

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