I think everyone's experience with a terminal disease is so deeply personal and unique to the person, the context in which they're living and the relationships that they have.
There is only one issue: man's lack of experience in feeling his Divine self and his innate connection with the Divine. All other issues stem from this.
No matter what you're doing, live it. Make an experience. Have fun. Relate to someone. Take them in. Learn.
That seems to me the great American danger we're all in, that we'll bargain away the experience of being alive for the appearance of it.
I prefer to think of the audience as a single living organism with which I am sharing a singular, never-to-be-repeated experience.
I started working on a TV show in Australia, straight out of high school, so I missed the whole university experience.
Weakness is something we don't like to admit we have. We hold it against people, until we experience it, and then we feel more compassion for it.
I don't know of any other creature on earth other than man that will sit in a corner and cry because of some painful experience in the past.
If I'm going to do television, I wanted that 'North and South' experience. I wanted something that's going to challenge me on a constant basis.
I just don't believe you're capable of being an actor unless you have a desire to experience your emotions in a public way.
Some people become so immersed an a show, they have an image that the actor is not too dissimilar, but fortunately I've never had that experience.
Show me someone who doesn't have some sort of experience that they would be uncomfortable for people to know about and I'll show you a dullard.
My favorite job is the next one. It's such a gratifying experience getting to creatively keep trying something new and push things in a different direction.
I think I have a tendency to look at things subjectively rather than objectively when I reflect on my experience.
It's a very strange and quite terrifying experience to watch yourself on TV. I never like to do it with other people.
The truth is the real Christian experience is truly about repenting every day because there is no Christian that doesn't sin.
Acting is therapeutic. I say I'm not shy, but... Acting is a very vulnerable experience, and you've got to be really confident to put yourself out there to be judged.
I remember when I got a part on 'Seinfeld' it was like an out of body experience, I was so excited.
I even lived on campus to get the college experience. I had five roommates and I still keep in touch with them while I'm on the road.
I am the the type to have a personal experience with a celebrity, but I'm too classy to bring that up.
It's exciting that you've got an entire season to experience 24 hours of highly dramatically charged human experience. It allows for the close inspection of minutiae in behaviour.