I'm a dreamer and a realist.

I'm addicted to creating and writing.

I don't want to be a reality retro star.

I am truly independently owned and operated.

Every day that I wake up has to be a good day!

My life is part humor, part roses, part thorns.

I always think in life passion supersedes everything.

I've had plenty of big hits and plenty of big misses.

You'll laugh at the comedy of errors that is my life.

Sometimes I will endanger my own life to pleasure a woman.

I want to fill my life with as much awesome stuff as I can.

For me as a solo artist, I never want to be a nostalgia act.

Thoroughly read all your contracts. I really mean thoroughly.

The secret to #success lies in the gap between dream and reality.

The philosophy of my life is the harder I worked, the luckier I got.

All my life, I've been a type 1 diabetic. I've always taken life day by day.

I do meet-and-greets at every show and meet a minimum of 20-35 fans at each.

Obviously, in my past, I had a quite wild relationship with Pamela Anderson.

Everyone wants to go to the party and the red carpet, but my life is 90% the work.

I didn't hate Nirvana. That was more of a media-constructed this-versus-that thing.

You're never gonna make everyone love what you do. You just embrace the fans that do.

Whether its active rock, pop, country, hip-hop - I love music; it's therapeutic to me.

I constantly write, record, and play music for public consumption and because it's therapeutic for me.

The video for 'Ride the Wind,' we shot that in Detroit. We shot it at Joe Louis Arena two nights in a row.

You want to go to a summer concert and not watch a band staring at its shoes for six hours and complaining.

As far back as I can remember, I am one of those guys that works hard and plays harder. I have to have both.

I'm the son of a Navy veteran, my two sisters are in the Air Force, I have a cousin who's a Navy Seal, and more.

One of the things that matters to me, when you're out on the road, I want to make sure people are having a good time.

For me, music is therapeutic, so the songs that came to me the easiest came from the most devastating moments of my life.

I'm on the phone 24/7 with my kids talking to them about the ups and down of life, schoolwork, bullying, the great times.

With 'I Want Action,' I think people take it in the context of the Sunset Strip and the party scene; it was tongue-in-cheek.

You can't have self-pity. At some point, you have to say, 'These are the cards I've been dealt, and I'm going to play them.'

I absolutely love and respect the past, but I'm not a 'glory days' guy. I love where we've been and love where I'm at and going.

I love it. It's all good to me. Whether I'm performing in New York, L.A., Columbus or Des Moines, I give 110 percent every night.

Most bands have a two-year success rate. By the third year, it's sort of over. Here we are in Poison still together 26 years later.

Any band that is out there chasing it is doing more destruction to music then someone who is out there playing what they truly feel.

A lot of bands live and breathe out of hotels. I just happen to be the one that lives on my bus. I have camped and RVed my entire life.

I never envisioned being a rock star. I envisioned the stage. I would draw and draw and draw the stage, or the tour bus. It was much simpler.

I may have some things tougher than the average person, but there are a lot of people who are going through worse things than me. I can't live in fear.

Poison is one of the first, if not the first, truly independent bands to sell 3 million copies of our first record. It was before we were with a big company.

The bottom line is that TV can either be a great asset to your career, or if you're a complete ass that people hate, it can be the final nail in your coffin.

I'm not the new kid on the block anymore. Writers always use the phrase "aging rocker," and I'm like, "What other option do I have?" You're either aging or you're dead.

With the Internet, you can be easily exposed and disposed. You can create some viral video, the biggest thing ever, and then four weeks later, no one remembers your name.

A brain hemorrhage puts it all in a deeper perspective. I'm one of those guys hit by lightning. I see the big picture. Everything is in perspective now. Let's just say I'm the kind of guy who knows how to enjoy the moment.

I don't like high-maintenance. High-maintenance does not work for me at all. And I don't like anybody who talks down to people. I don't speak down to anyone who works around me, and so I won't put up with it in a relationship.

[My hair] creates this Tarzanesque, likeable bad-boy image. It says, 'I am a wild child. I will take you on a Harley ride, then make passionate love to you. And should you be attacked by a lion or an idiot at a bar, I will protect you.'

I believe you must find the things in life that you love, and don't let anybody or anything stop you. There may be lesser successes, but you're never a failure unless you choose not to do something. I don't fail unless I quit. You must believe to receive.

I tell my daughters, 'If something doesn't feel right, whether that's going to a party, doing a video, shooting something, you're around someone that's creeping you out, use your gut. If you're in a car with a driver and something don't feel right, use your gut.'

I want to tell the story. Mostly, when you see rock movies, it has to be this over-the-top thing. I want to give people a Bret Michaels movie where they see that my life is a comedy of errors. I also want to show my fans how to get through the kind of troubles that would leave most people flat on the floor.

I don't care what anyone says. You have to wake up and say to yourself, 'I accept that I have diabetes, and I'm not going to let it run my entire life.' It's a fine line, a Catch-22, a balancing act. I work to enjoy my life like a regular human being and at the same time keep my blood sugar levels as decent as possible.

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