I don't feel I'm a step above anyone on this team. I'm just another link in the chain.
I've spent years trying to time up my drops with my throws. You learn to listen to your feet and trust your positions.
When I was a kid. I had traveled the world by the time I was 13 years old because of all the competitions I did for inline skating.
I didn't know exactly what I wanted to do in school, but I definitely didn't have adequate time to reach my full potential as a student.
It came so soon and so fast. It's just overwhelming. Every time I think about it, I just can't believe it.
No one can possibly know what is about to happen: it is happening, each time, for the first time, for the only time.
The writer's greed is appalling. He wants, or seems to want, everything and practically everybody, in another sense, and at the same time, he needs no one at all.
Script comes first, then the actors, then you gotta be lucky enough to get the right time slot. Then people have to watch.
Despite the usual idea of a figure skater, I have no rhythm when it comes to even walking off the ice. I fall off curbs all the time.
When you are an athlete, it's difficult to take time off and say you want to come back without everyone judging you and attacking you.
I'd much rather win in three or four sets than go the distance all the time; I seem to put everyone through the wringer quite a bit.
Another thing that freaks me out is time. Time is like a book. You have a beginning, a middle and an end. It's just a cycle.
It might have been easier to retire, to say my knee couldn't handle it and let that be that. At the same time, the prospect of not being able to compete in gymnastics anymore was heartbreaking.
The more sleep you get in before the clock turns midnight, the more rested you feel no matter what time your alarm goes off.
Our privacy is starting to be invaded and we can't get anything done. I'm happy with the fundraising but upset we don't have time to talk and meet with people.
The work that we do during the winter is very important; we have a new bike and it's important to develop it during this time, and we start with this test.
[to Rita about Phil] Larry: Did he actually call himself "the talent"?
Lillian House: Exercising changed my life. Larry Lipton: I prefer to atrophy.
Larry Lipton: C'mon, more, more! Adrenalin is leaking out of my ears!
If I can't play for big money, I play for a little money. And if I can't play for a little money, I stay in bed that day.
Current ethos in Silicon Valley is that if you build a website that people keep coming back to and is changing the lives of millions, you can eventually make money.