I feel there are injustices in the world that I'll stand up for, and I think that it's important to realize that the world is filled with these kinds of issues.
All my stories take place on the West Coast - not the beach, but smaller inland towns. I feel homesick, and I find inspiration in capturing that.
Raising kids these days is hard. I'm the second to last child in my family. I think it's tough; I have two kids, I see them and I feel like I see things in them; they awaken the inner child in you.
I feel like I play better when I'm calm. There is an inner peace I can tap into sometimes during my matches.
It's only recently that we've discovered that the artist's inner self is somehow more important than the public world. I'm happier to create exterior pieces for the world rather than to express something I deeply feel or wish to say.
This journey from non-dancer to dancer has given me a lot of self-confidence and inner strength. I feel like a different person.
As long as I feel that inner strength, I'll be all right.
We women must listen to our inner voice. It is easier for women to do this as they are not afraid to say what they feel.
I feel really good in the box when I get an AB in the first inning. I feel like it just starts the day the right way.
When you give your team five innings, you don't really feel good about five innings.
Cricketers are made to feel that they are very special. That is okay as long as cricketers realise they are only as good as their last innings.
After you score 300 runs in one innings, you begin to feel that every innings should be close to this one. Of course, I know that won't happen. But I will be disappointed if I get going well and am unable to convert it into a huge score.
'Melancholy' is prettier than 'depression'; it connotes a kind of nocturnal grace. Makes one feel more innocently beleaguered.
I'm a perfectionist. I'm pretty much insatiable. I feel there's so many things I can improve on.
For a Nabokov fan, paging through 'Fine Lines,' which includes a critical introduction and several essayistic evaluations of Nabokov's scientific oeuvre, can feel a bit like reading the second half of 'Pale Fire': one is confronted by a content-rich, almost dementedly tangential commentary on an increasingly inscrutable work.
When I wake up in the morning, I feel just like any other insecure 24-year-old girl.
I am quite an insecure person, and I think that, like any director, if I'm asked about my vision for a piece, I feel very vulnerable.
The psychic task which a person can and must set for himself is not to feel secure, but to be able to tolerate insecurity.
The task we must set for ourselves is not to feel secure, but to be able to tolerate insecurity.
When my body is strong, I feel stronger inside. I feel more capable of handling emotional situations. Usually I'm more of a inside-out person, but this was a great case of me from the outside in.