Call it a case of observer bias on my part, but Humanist Paganism seems to be an emerging option for those who want to be part of the Pagan community, but who want to be a little more intellectual about their practices, and they really don't care about the 'woo' anymore.
It's a small world, but I wouldn't want to have to paint it.
Most painters want recognition, especially by their peers.
I want to make paintings that look as if they were made by a child.
Want to train a machine translation system? Train it on a gazillion pairs of sentences of parallel corpora, and that creates a lot of breakthrough results. Increasingly, I'm seeing results on small data where you want to try to take in results even if you have 1,000 images.
I want people to know their palate is a snowflake. We all like different things. Why should we all have the same taste in wines?
I recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. And I have always recognized Jerusalem as the capital of the independent, fully sovereign Palestinian state that we all want to emerge from negotiations toward a true two-state solution.
I want to be surrounded by women, I want to be snuggled and cuddled and pampered.
If I get involved in a charity, I really want to be a part of it. I don't want to just put my name on your pamphlet.
If you start pandering to young people, you're going to get accused of simply giving people what they want.
I want my prose to be as clear as a pane of glass.
I don't want to be followed by paparazzi; that terrifies me.
When I am writing anything in general, I just want to tell the story that exists in my head; I don't try to write a parable or make a point.
What I have in advance are people I want to write about and a problem or problems that I see those people encountering and that I want to explore - it all proceeds sentence by sentence, paragraph by paragraph, and scene by scene.
We do not want to go to the U.K. and take something from them. We do not want to be parasites. We want to work there, and I think that Hungarians are working well.
In front of 40,000 people, you don't really want to drop a catch or misfield. It's part and parcel of the game.
I don't feel famous and I didn't want my autobiography to be like a Paris Hilton story.
I found that this Parkinson's does slow you down, whether you want to slow down or not.
People that want to talk can talk. Even a parrot talks. People are always going to have their thoughts on what they're going to say.
With some actors, if I have upward of 10 notes, I don't want to give them all 10 notes and overwhelm them. I usually parse them out three or four at a time.