Most times when folks ask for advice, they already know what they should do. They just want to hear it from someone else.
Sometimes, you have to shot block a friend's prayer because she's asking God to bless an obviously bad dating relationship.
I grind my teeth and keep my thumbs in so tight that I've dislocated them, just not to scream. Sometimes as an actor one is lucky enough to be asked to scream.
I seek to be authentic and engaging, using my own experiences, being as vulnerable as I ask my clients to be, to enhance the process.
I actually don't watch TV at all. If you asked me what my favorite TV show is, I couldn't tell you because I don't watch TV.
If I was asked to say what was the greatest invention of human beings, I would say the sentence.
The studio didn't ask them to learn their trade, they just worked them, and when that personality or that gimmick or whatever they had ran dry at the box office, they were dropped and out.
You never ask why you've been fired because if you do, they're liable to tell you.
I used to draw a lot. If my mother would ask me to do something else, I'd have a hairy conniption. I'd just go crazy.
I would never offer advice without the person asking for it. I, in general, don't believe in giving advice, actually, as a human being I don't.
After we have calmly stood by and allowed monopolies to grow fat, we should not be asked to make them bloated.
I don't understand why asking people to eat a well-balanced, vegetarian diet is considered drastic, while it is medically conservative to cut people open.
I've never asked for special treatment along the way. And I'm never going to hide the fact that I'm a girl, ever. That's obvious, isn't it?
Ask yourself: was there anything I could have done to prevent the situation? If the answer is yes, do something now and become a better person for it.
People are always asking me in interviews, 'What do you think of foreign affairs?' I just say, 'I've had a few.'
It's very rare that I get stopped or get asked for an autograph or anything - none of which I mind - but people don't really care that much.
Make decisions about the President's personal security. He can overrule you, but don't ask him to be the one to counsel caution.
A soul-based workplace asks things of me that I didn't even know I had. It's constantly telling me that I belong to something large in the world.
All my friends and peers keep asking me when I'm going to rest - I just tell them it's another dirty four-letter word!
I'm the kind of parent who asks my kids questions like, 'What would be your ideal thing to do in the summer?'
For businesses to be successful, they need to constantly ask the question: 'How can we provide value to our customers?' At the end of the day, that is what matters.