Nothing in our culture, not even home computers, is more overrated than the epidermal felicity of two featherless bipeds in desperate congress.
You know, we lose more homes every year to flooding than we do any other event in America.
You will fall in love with train rides, and sooner or later you will realize that nowhere seems like home anymore.
While amidst the crowd and seeking quieteness in another zone you can still get away from them by homing in on matters within.
Building our homes as fortresses of righteousness for protection from the world takes constant labor and diligence.
Before you echo 'Amen' in your home or place of worship, think and remember...a child is listening.
The land of possibility is a better place to make your home than the realm of expectation will ever be
Globally, democracies have also acted in ways that suggest an outright renunciation of their principles at home.
Colleges are like old-age homes, except for the fact that more people die in colleges.
If I win and get the money, then the Oakland Police department is going to buy a boys' home, me a house, my family a house, and a Stop Police Brutality Center.
You can't get a job without experience and you can't get experience until you have a job. Once you solve that problem you are home free.
I still that that movie-goers like the experience of leaving their homes and going to have a communal experience, especially in comedies or interactive things where you can get an audience reaction to.
Growing up in a violent home is a terrifying and traumatic experience that can affect every aspect of a child's life, growth, and development.
Television is an isolating experience, sadly enough. I'm sorry to say it. But as good as it ever gets, it's still isolating. You sit in your home and visit with no one.
I Knew why I felt at home. The spirit of freedom was hovering over that play yard as it did all over France at that time. A country was free again.
As a child I was given the freedom to explore my passion for acting, but I also grew up in a home where there were a lot of rules. I didn't have 'yes' parents.
Talking with my friends and family every day helps keep me grounded and connected to home. They are the most important things to me.
Growing up, in church we had the homily; at home it's what I call the 'momily' - the inspirational and instructive mom-isms that every family has.
I mean I love my family very much, but there is a difference when you're reuniting with your family outside of your hometown and reuniting in the family home.
If I'm home, I'll be happy. And if I'm around family, and if I'm working on projects with friends, I don't know what else I'd want to be doing.
I have lots of Scottish blood and know that my family name is Scottish. At my home in the States I have a tartan crest but, unfortunately, I do a terrible Scottish accent.