To move past fear is a cliche.
If you have an issue with homosexuality, then it comes to your own fear and your own darkness.
The fear for a network is the viewer gets tired of you. Not that you lost any credibility, but they get tired of you.
Although I am deeply grateful to a great many people, I forgo the temptation of naming them for fear that I might slight any by omission.
The Taliban knows they have more to fear from an educated girl than an American drone.
You need fear to create, to live.
I was in New York City on 9/11. Grief remains from that awful day, but not only grief. There is fear, too, a fear informed by the knowledge that whatever my worst nightmare is, there is someone out there embittered enough to carry it out.
The first duty of man is to conquer fear; he must get rid of it, he cannot act till then.
The fearful unbelief is unbelief in yourself.
A lot of the physical flirtation with fear I did early on in my career, when I was a much younger person - stuff I wouldn't do now. But I was very interested in the mechanics of risk and fear in those days. And I found out fear pretty much always fee...
I used to have a great fear of constitutional conventions. I have a great fear now of not having one.
The biggest obstacle to wealth is fear. People are afraid to think big, but if you think small, you'll only achieve small things.
I will show you fear in a handful of dust.
The reflection of the flame in the glass seems to be touching the hand. And you feel the helpless fear of these dismembered parts. This sort of thing can hardly be visualized at the script stage.
When the entertainers of the Right aren't declaring their disgust with President Obama for groveling before foreign potentates, they're pretending to fear him as a left-wing thug, an exemplar of what they call 'the Chicago way.'
Cruelty is a tyrant that's always attended with fear.
Scalded cats fear even cold water.
I am totally fearless! Well, of course, I'm not totally fearless. I worry constantly and obsess over things, but I just don't let fear stand in the way of doing something that I really want to do.
What puts someone on guard isn't necessarily the fear of being found out.
Anyone who agrees to be interviewed must decide where to draw the line between what is public and what is private. But the line can shift, depending on who is asking the questions. What puts someone on guard isn't necessarily the fear of being 'found...
It sometimes is just the fear of being misunderstood.