You can tell a lot about a man's character by watching him win or lose money.
Whoever said, 'It's not whether you win or lose that counts,' probably lost.
You find that you have peace of mind and can enjoy yourself, get more sleep, and rest when you know that it was a one hundred percent effort that you gave - win or lose.
When a sports movie really works, it gets you on all levels, because the stakes are high. It's black and white. It's win or lose.
Win or lose, star or not, you wait for your car with everyone else, and waiting for your car is a drag.
As you get older you play in more important games and that is when you start thinking about what will happen if you win or lose.
When you are 16 there is no fear whatsoever. As you get older you play in more important games and that is when you start thinking about what will happen if you win or lose.
By the end of it, you never know how it's going to turn out. Hopefully if I pick the right songs and put the right melodies on it and all the collaboration works out. it's a win-win situation.
Most of us donβt look at investment in a win-win situation. You have to give in a little bit; you have to take a little bit. Most feel everything has to be rinsed out for closing of the transaction.
Everybody has those stories that make them wince when they think about them silently. But as soon as you tell that story, it becomes a little bit less cringe-inducing.
I just think lots of words have physicality. How about the word 'wobble?' You think that's arbitrary? When you say the word 'wince,' you wince. How about that?
There's a certain edge about cruelty. If you're honest about it, most people wince, but say it had to be said.
When you read 'author Katharine Holabird, creator of Angelina' and you're not even mentioned, you wince.
I'd love to retire somewhere like Winchester, where you have one foot on the pavement but a sense of being in the country as well.
The older you get the stronger the wind gets - and it's always in your face.
The Marianne Vos Route goes through the seven villages of Aalburg, where I grew up, and celebrates my World and Olympic titles with a number of benches along the route, where you can stop and rest your legs. You'll see the white windmill in Meeuwen and, in Babylonienbroek, a statue of the silver bike I rode to celebrate my Olympic track win.
Never have more children than you have car windows.
My mother always used to say when picking up a product, 'Would you give this to the Duchess of Windsor?' Well, that's lovely. But the Duchess of Windsor is dead.
In Windsor in the forties, and even up into the fifties and sixties, if you were black, you had to sit in the balcony of the theatres, and you couldn't buy property in most places.
Cape Town, South Africa, was pretty incredible. That's probably the coolest place I have ever been, and the kiteboarding is insane there. It's so windy, so you can get massive air.