I come from a massive family, and the youngest is twentysomething years younger than I am, so I grew up with children.
It takes years of building that experience as a filmmaker, as well as physically. You have to have a high level understanding of martial arts.
Based on 30 years of experience with the Iranians, they will give you 100 words. Trust only one of the 100.
I had a mystical experience when I was in my late teens, early 20s, and I spent years trying to recapture that.
'Giving 2.0' frames giving as a learning experience and encourages everyone to make giving a part of your year-round life.
From my experience, moving through life, things tend to go in eight- to 10-year cycles. Friends, relationships and whatnot.
Going to a party, for me, is as much a learning experience as, you know, sitting in a lecture.
We're talking about people who've already got 3-4, if not 5-6 years' experience or more, and it's about trying to help professionals develop, using us as a resource for that development.
It took me years to understand that words are often as important as experience, because words make experience last.
The vast amount of waste and sheer stupidity in government - from the Pentagon to the Food and Drug Administration - could fill committee agendas for years.
The nice thing about the world that I've been able to inhabit for the last couple of years is that I'm given a lot of freedom. Not all artists really get that.
Two hundred years ago, our precursors in Haiti struck a blow for freedom, which was heard around the world, and across centuries.
Once you are over 30, 35 years old, I think everyone should get down to the gym and start moving again.
It's probably foolish to expect relationships to go on forever and to say that because something only lasts 10 years, it's a failure.
When I was nine years old, my family lost our home, and the six of us moved into my grandparents' converted garage.
I had been out there long enough. I had not seen my family for four years.
The Jersey Shore is the kind of place where the policeman has a little cottage that might have been in the family for years and many other people call home.
My family took me to church when I was like 4 years old, and I had to be in a pageant, and I was playing Jesus.
In Positano, I like the San Pietro Hotel, which is run by a friend whose family has owned the hotel for more than 100 years.
Dummy Dum Dum was my nickname for years at school. I was the strange one of the family, the one who couldn't remember his name.
After 20 years in the game, I was fortunate to get away from the game and enjoy my family, which was great for me.