Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I don't see myself as offending people.
I can't let other people dictate how I see myself.
I try to please myself. I don't try to anticipate what people want to see.
I think of myself as a very lazy writer, though other people see it differently.
I don't see myself as being as big of an influence as other people seem to think.
I guess I'm going to have to go Google myself and see why people think I shouldn't be coaching.
I think people are frightened by different things, so I don't see myself as particularly courageous.
I stopped hating people. I also tried to see the positives in negative situations that I found myself in.
I can say the people you see on TV are real-life individuals, not just people playing a role, myself included.
I don't take myself as seriously as I did when I was playing, and it works, and I think people see the self-deprecation in my commentary.
I have never been able to see myself as fitting into one category, and I have never been able to limit my contact with people to one group of people.
I see myself as the literary equivalent of a skilled lathe-operator, or a basket-weaver; a potter, maybe: I make mildly diverting objects that people want to buy.
I can't even begin to visualize myself as a five-star general... When I think of the people who are five-star generals, I can't even see myself standing in their shadow.
Athletes these days are too robotic. People like to see performances filled with emotion. In my career I tried to be amusing, to differentiate myself from the other champions.
I had some experience in dealing with people who have mental illness and depression, but I didn't see the signs in myself. I couldn't ask for help because I didn't know I needed help.
At one point, I didn't really consider myself as a puncher because it was more so that the speed created the knockouts. People were getting hit with punches they didn't see and they were going down.
When hearing aids were first mentioned, I pictured myself as that old geezer at the back of the church with the whistling ear trumpet, but you can't see these Phonak hearing aids, and people don't realise you've got them in.
I like to see the kids in my area wearing England shirts, not Pakistan or India ones. A lot of it comes from the older generations but it's changing slowly, especially if people like myself and Ravi Bopara are playing for England.