I view my career like a rubber-band ball in that every role is a new experience building toward something bigger.
The world is the true classroom. The most rewarding and important type of learning is through experience, seeing something with our own eyes.
I think I may try and write something about my pretty extraordinary experience with the 101st in Iraq.
I know when I go to a movie I want to experience something, whether to laugh, to cry, to feel bad.
I was brought up to think a lot about food and have respect for it, both as medicine and something to eat and enjoy.
I was a girl and became a woman. Something about having the freedom at home to be in the position I wanted, to have the people I wanted, was empowering.
A joke is a way to say, 'I'm going to do something funny now. If I don't get a laugh at the end, I'm a failure.'
I realized that I was afraid to really, really try something, 100%, because I had never reached true failure.
I come from a large family, but I was not raised with a fortune. Something more was left me, and that was family values.
I don't know whether that comes from having a family - having something very important at home that needed to be protected.
My mom was diagnosed with breast cancer when I was 13 and it was something we weren't really aware of as a family.
I always wanted to go into the military or something like that - my whole family, all my friends are either Air Force, Navy, or Marines.
I think that something needs to be weird in order to have a real beauty.
Beauty is not something you can count on. Usually, when people say you are beautiful, it is when there is a harmony between the inside and the outside.
It's how you look at beauty. Is it only an outward appearance with hair and makeup and a hot body, or is it something deeper than that?
There is no definition of beauty, but when you can see someone's spirit coming through, something unexplainable, that's beautiful to me.
The funeral business is so manipulative emotionally. I would want to be thrown into the sea or burned - something that's not a big hassle.
Write that novel. Start that business you've always wanted to. The ultimate high of life is the commitment to pursuing something.
On the Internet, it is assumed people are in business to sell out, not to build something they can pass along to their grandkids.
I don't do something necessarily to make a big profit or because it's a logical business decision.
If you've been fortunate enough to have some success in business, I think it's important to put something back.