I am a Marxist Leninist and I will be one until the last day of my life.
'Mary Poppins' was one of the best experiences of my life.
I think the idea of 'Mary Poppins' has been blowing in and out of me, like a curtain at a window, all my life.
Music is a part of my life all the time - on the plane, before matches, driving out to the court.
I would never complain about my life, even though I really would like to have a mate.
I'm living the exact life I planned on living when I was five. My life has taken some turns and changes that I didn't anticipate, and it has brought me different things. I thought material things would bring me happiness, which they didn't. But through this, I have learned what things are important and what aren't.
If anybody wanted to photograph my life, they'd get bored in a day. 'Heres Matt at home learning his lines. Here's Matt researching in aisle six of his local library'. A few hours of that and they'd go home.
I prayed every day of my life, and that was instilled in me as a kid, and as I've gotten older, that's just matured in me.
My senior year, I got to play Maureen in 'Rent,' and I had more fun than I'd ever had in my life.
Air Max is from when we were running the streets. It was comfortable to wear in London, whether you were going out to a club or kicking a ball in the streets. Those kinds of things stick in my mind from the young, magical, fantasy years of my life.
Oddly enough, MS has made my life so much better than it was before. I now appreciate what I have and I am not running around like a rat in a maze.
Music has always been an incredibly significant part of my life and a meaningful way in which I express myself.
It's very easy to confuse confident motion with being productive - and they're not the same thing. Productive to me means measurable outcomes that apply to my most important to-dos that positively affect my life. That's it.
My best mentor is a mechanic - and he never left the sixth grade. By any competency measure, he doesn't have it. But the perspective he brings to me and my life is, bar none, the most helpful.
Yoga is a big part of my life now. There's not a day that goes by where I don't do an Asana and mediation practice.
When you're clinically depressed the serotonin in your brain is out of balance and probably always will be out of balance. So I take medication to get that proper balance back. I'll probably have to be on it the rest of my life.
I realised that if I wanted to carry on with my musical dreams, I had to change, so I started meditating, and I changed my life entirely.
Its not just about competition: it's my life, my lifestyle. So I train every day, and I feel very good, because sometimes training is like meditations for me; it's a good escape to me to the problems for everything.
I can say without melodrama or malice that Hollywood ruined my life.
I do have a memo all the time because I need to be guided by something in my life. I'm not religious and I don't have idols, so something has to drive me.