The one thing that I have done really well in my life is be a father.
My parents were married my whole life until my father passed away a few years ago.
Life was a lot simpler when what we honored was father and mother rather than all major credit cards.
Having a better and more productive life than my monster father has been my most significant accomplishment.
Thanks to my father, I didn't have to face the tough side of life. Probably that's why I always chose love over money.
The most important thing in my father's life? World peace. Me and my brother. My mom.
I grew up learning from a father who said, 'When you make a mistake or you make a bad decision, you man up and take responsibility.'
I think my biggest focus for myself is learning how to continue to get through the trauma that my father has caused in my life.
I'm always dancing in my kitchen. And I love to sing. I've always sung. My father was a lovely singer. Always sang Jim Reeves at parties.
My father always said, 'If you love what you do, you won't mind slogging through it for several hours a day.'
I think Romeo and Juliet is uplifting. That's how much a son wishes to avenge his father. That is how much two young people can love each other.
I said on numerous occasions how I feel about my father. I love him with all my heart.
My mother's incredible diaries, which she'd written from when she was 21, and even before that. She fell in love with my father when she was 12.
So many of our young women today, they're growing up without a father, but they're still thirsty for that and desiring positive male love.
My daughter has always had a strong sense of her own identity. From the day she was born her father and I were in love with and in awe of her and still are.
My love of books - not just of their tactile pleasures but of their astonishing variety - was born in a book-filled house; my father is a scholar.
Right is of no sex, Truth is of no color, God is the Father of us all, and we are all Brethren
My father used to say, 'Let them see you and not the suit. That should be secondary.'
My father didn't tell me how to live; he lived, and let me watch him do it.
At my father's request I took up the study of law at the University of Zurich In 1863.
My father's really fluent in French, but I can't speak at all. I actually took it twice in school already and failed both times!