Ever since childhood, when I lived within earshot of the Boston and Maine, I have seldom heard a train go by and not wished I was on it.
While I was serving, I worked as an adventure training officer, teaching soldiers how to ski, canoe and climb.
I was a professional fighter for a while, and I trained in martial arts for seven years, so I think that kind of helped form a base for me as far as dancing.
I am being taken care of by a higher being than myself or my coaches or my training staff.
Until we recognize the essential role of biology, our attempts to truly unify the universe will remain a train to nowhere.
I enjoy racing so much. Ever since I was 8 or 9, I trained every stroke, because it was the only way I could race a lot.
If I get the walk of a character, that helps me find them. So I'm constantly looking at airports and train stations, registering walks.
When I stopped doing ballet, I started training in the pool. I would do my barre exercises in the water, because that prevents injuries.
It's been strange and weird watching the other girls at the U.S. Olympic trials just because I was training to be out there myself.
That's something that is almost accidental at the beginning of a career, but the more you write, the more trained you are to recognize the little signals.
When I'm not in training. I'll walk around the streets at 153, but it's not solid; it's my socializing weight.
I have stage combat training from college, which is drastically different than fighting for the screen, but I do enjoy that kind of stuff.
I was essentially trained by Oscar Hammerstein to think of songs as one-act plays, to move a song from point A to point B dramatically.
Consistency is a virtue for trains: what we want from a philosopher is insights, whether he comes by them consistently or not.
In the Soviet Union it was illegal to take a photograph of a train station. Look what happened to them. They tried to classify everything.
Sometimes it's like watching a train wreck. You're uncomfortable, but you just can't help yourself. Some of those so-called bad interviews actually turned into compelling television.
ReThink Training: The best process of learning is on the job, just-in-time, "nibble-knowledge" to incrementally transform mindsets and skillsets irrevocably.
I went to parochial grammar school, and I give thanks to the Catholic training because of course, they brought me to the heart of Jesus.
Sometimes you have to understand that you push ahead, there's going to be a lot of flak, there's going to be a lot of dogs barking, but the wagon train moves ahead.
I was a mime. I'm not kidding. I went to Northwestern University and they have a mime company, so we did a lot of training and then a lot of mime shows around Chicago.
I am happy to have played a match and break the rhythm of daily training.