I used to always go to church on holidays, but I don't go much any more.
Men, we don't get much, as far as holidays go - Father's Day.
I have a big problem when the sanctimonious, holier than thou congressmen and women go on national television for six hours and beat somebody up with a stick, and not because I'm 'Ms. Manners.' That's not what bothers me. People in glass houses shouldn't throw stones.
Looking at Mount Kenya in the morning is a holistic experience. I go back at least once a year.
That's one thing about Hollywood. People don't always want what's real. People always want a little more. So for me, it's a compromise. Here you go, that hyper-reality.
In Hollywood people lie to each other and cheat each other and then go and play tennis. But I don't want to be a tennis player.
I never wanted to return to Hollywood because Hollywood people and the fakeness - very artificial and not dear to my heart. After I lived in the Midwest, and I learned what sincere, real people were all about, I never wanted to go back.
Besides buying a mansion or something, everything I wanted I always got. I'm just ready to invest it and save it. Otherwise, life can hit you, but you can't go back to working at Home Depot. That's why I always just be stacking.
I don't think too much about mechanics. I just like to go up there and swing. It's more than my swing, though. It's my mindset. I always go to home plate with a plan.
You don't have to swing hard to hit a home run. If you got the timing, it'll go.
When you're in the middle of a pennant race, you can't go up there thinking about home runs.
I always get super stoked to go to the Open, because it's in my home state. I get to stay in my parents' house and get to eat pancakes.
When peaceful reunification comes, the first thing I want to do is to take my 90-year-old mother and go to her home town.
I always go home to Buffalo in the offseason. I really enjoy my home town.
I'm not in the clubs; I'm a homebody. I go out when I feel I have to for work or if there's a special function. You might catch me at the grocery store, but you won't see me out and about in Atlanta.
I was pretty much a homebody; didn't really go to school dances, never went to a prom. I was a bit of a loner, a geek.
I'm a little more extreme than a homebody. Unless there's some event I really have to go to, I don't like to leave my house.
I didn't go to my prom. I didn't go to my homecoming.
I just think if I can go from being a homeless kid with a dream of being in the biggest band in the world and making that happen, I can do a lot of other cool stuff, too.
I had a tryout when I was, like, 19 and totally not prepared. I was 170 pounds with homemade gear. At that point, I realized how far I had to go to even get looked at. Then, when I was 22 or 23, I was much more prepared, and that second tryout went way better.