I live with some of my best friends from high school, very commune-like, in my house. It's my hippie way of life.
When once I got to America I fell in love with hippie culture, and I've always wanted to live in the country and grow organic vegetables.
But we cannot just take this historical fact for granted. We must make it live.
We would like to live as we once lived, but history will not permit it.
Life is a wonderful thing to talk about, or to read about in history books - but it is terrible when one has to live it.
If you're an artist, and you put out a record - most artists only have one or two hit records - that has 100 million streams, on certain services you only get paid on 75% of those streams. How's an artist going to live like that?
Unless one is able to live fully in the present, the future is a hoax.
People lucky enough to live in the vicinity of an industrial hog farm are, with each breath, made keenly aware of the cause of their declining property values.
If I were to leave the U.S., I'd live in England. But I'd never leave the U.S. I own a 400-acre farm in Macon, Georgia. I raise cattle and hogs. I own horses, too. I love horses as much as singing. I like to hunt on horseback.
I live hour by hour, day by day. I can't even plan a holiday. I go on holiday, like, the day after I book it.
When Jesus comes to live in our hearts, the seed of holiness is planted.
We live in an interconnected world, in an interconnected time, and we need holistic solutions. We have a crisis of inequality, and we need climate solutions that solve that crisis.
I don't like being on television when I'm playing live. I don't even like being on Jools Holland or any of them programs.
The world of 'Sherlock Holmes' and the world that we live in now is big enough to take more than one interpretation.
The Holocaust was an obscene period in our nation's history. I mean in this century's history. But we all lived in this century. I didn't live in this century.
I'm more of a homebody. I'm constantly asked: 'Why don't we see you out?' But that's not what drives me. I prefer to have people over - which I do a lot, because I bought a house that's way too big for me, and four of my friends live there.
For a man who no longer has a homeland, writing becomes a place to live.
You live overseas, you see these exotic places and you want to know about them. But, weirdly, it also made me homesick for all these very prosaic places in America.
We live in a homogenized world, where it's hard to get excited when everything is slick and professional. The interesting things are the dull things.
I was really too honest a man to be a politician and live.