Everyone experiences different parts of themselves at different times, these different parts of themselves that come out in different settings.
I started writing when I was twenty, and my first book came out seventeen years later.
How people interpret my degrees of sexiness is out of my hands.
Racism and sexism, misogyny and homophobia, they're so visible. They're out in the open. When they're visible, it's a lot easier to deal with them.
Even on one leg, I thought I could knock Tony Bellew out. I was gutted when Shane McGuigan threw the towel in.
Sharks freak me out.
I found out that superstars Winkler and William Shatner are real people, and I was so thankful for that.
I missed out on my teenage years. I led a sheltered life. I was practicing scales instead of playing football.
I always had a soft spot for Sherlock Holmes and used to imagine helping him out.
I don't throw my clothes out after one wear. Shocking, I know.
There are no shortcuts when it comes to getting out of debt.
If we carry on filling up the calendar, we keep on pushing the athlete, we shorten the athletes longevity. The risk is to shorten a career that could have lasted 10 years because the athlete is burnt out.
The shortstop is a perfectly conditioned athlete. You're running out on relays all the time. You're covering second base. On every pitch, you're moving.
Shout out to my boy Guwop. We came in the game, and we learned from the best.
Shutting out the depression strengthens it. While you hide from it, it grows.
I want to thank The Beatles for almost single-handedly getting me out of writer's block.
I was singled out by other girls for participating in classroom discussions and physically bullied.
Anyone who creates something new or does something different artistically is going to be singled out.
It's not really cool to be singled out.
The mind's passion is all for singling out. Obscurity has another tale to tell.