I'm an OCD neat freak. I can't stand messes. I make my bed every morning. Laundry. I do it all.

Whether it's destiny or fate or whatever, I don't think I could do a French Laundry anywhere else.

If you saw me trying to do laundry or something, well, I'm not really equipped to do anything else.

Have you noticed that if you leave the laundry in the hamper long enough, it's ready to wear again?

I'm comfortable airing my laundry. I don't think one thing's dirty or clean. It's just what I wear.

Love is mental illness going in and mental illness coming out. In between, you do a lot of laundry.

As weird as it may seem, I enjoy doing laundry and watering my plants, very normal things like that.

If there were a category in the Olympics for laundry, my mother would have been a gold-medal winner.

Realism has to be such high quality, you can't fake it. It's all hanging out there like the laundry.

For me, being successful meant not having to do my laundry at a laundromat and not having a second job.

I really like doing the laundry, because I succeed at it. But I loathe putting it away. It is already clean.

I always make the joke that I go home, to one of my homes, to go and do laundry so I can go on the road again.

We should all do what, in the long run, gives us joy, even if it is only picking grapes or sorting the laundry.

Among the laundry list of threats to our world, climate change more often than not makes these challenges worse.

The secret to finding your passion is to bring it to everything you do. --Marie Forleo (Yes, even doing the laundry!)

In my experience in Washington, when people refuse to come clean, it is usually because they are hiding dirty laundry.

Even if you start your laundry before 8 AM on Saturday, you will not finish folding it until after midnight on Sunday.

I really don't go out. I love watching movies, and on a day off, I'll work out, do groceries, do laundry, see a friend.

I do laundry, but my bags from the last race will sit there until the very last minute that I have to do laundry again.

I founded Wang Laboratories . . . to show that Chinese could excel at things other than running laundries and restaurants.

I have a problem getting all my laundry done, cleaning up and doing all of the normal daily things that a grownup should do.

It is not weird for a dad to be doing the dishes, the laundry, and taking the kids to school, and read them stories for bed.

Why would I want a place of my own? Then I would have to things worry about, like doing laundry and having food in the fridge.

If you don't go the gym, you don't look good. If you don't tan, you're pale. If you don't do laundry, you don't got no clothes.

I don't get rattled about the big things. I get rattled when I have to pick up my laundry, get gas in the car, pick up a script.

I love being a mother; I hate being a housewife - the cooking, the laundry - because it takes away time I could be with my kids.

I am like that guy on the 'Odd Couple,' and it is not the neat guy. I go into my room and find pieces of pizza under the laundry.

I started doing experiments - mostly in organic chemistry, because it was so much more interesting - in my mother's laundry at home.

I procrastinate all morning. That's when I get my office work done and answer e-mails and see what's on the Internet and do laundry.

Sometimes I'd like to stuff all Jews (myself included) into the drawer of a laundry basket. then open it to see if they've suffocated

The stock market resembles a huge laundry in which institutions take in large blocks of each others washing ... without rhyme or reason.

Women basically want the same thing - a good passionate story, a great fantasy - and for our partners to do the laundry and the washing up.

What interests me more than dramatic heroics are the domestic things: How do people do laundry and find food when the world is about to end?

My mother had no end of tragedy in her life. She would make herself get up and take a deep breath and go out and do laundry. Hang up sheets.

No matter what your laundry list of requirements in choosing a mate, there has to be an element of good luck and good fortune and good timing.

I love the smell of clean laundry. Working in the garden and getting my hands dirty. Doing the dishes. These are the things that make me feel normal.

It turns out that a husband who does the laundry, it's very romantic when you're older. And it's hard to believe when you're younger. But it's absolutely true.

My laundry list of wants in a partner is basically kindness. I want someone who is kind, and that's kind of where it begins and ends. I'm open to being surprised.

My God, it's laundry and family when I come back home. I've got to see my brother and kids, and my sister-in-law, my aunts, my uncles, cousins; everybody is here.

In 2011, I contributed an essay to Tin House, 'The Dark Side of Dinner Dishes, Laundry, and Child Care,' talking about women writers I felt had fallen off the map.

I don't remember my mother ever playing with me. And she was a perfectly good mother. But she had to do the laundry and clean the house and do the grocery shopping.

I made a dollar a day sweeping a laundry out. Then we made a record that was number two in Los Angeles. We got so excited hearing it on the radio that Carl threw up.

We didn't have money all the time to do laundry. A lot of the time, we didn't have soap or hot water. We were smart kids academically, but we'd go to school smelling.

I won't put in a load of laundry, because the machine is too loud and would drown out other, more significant noises - namely, the shuffling footsteps of the living dead.

I farm - there is something visceral about being attached to the land. I am a recording engineer. I do my own laundry most days, and I get on with the business of living.

Shopping for groceries for most people is like a chore. It's like doing the laundry or taking out the garbage. And we strive to make shopping engaging, fun and interactive.

Somewhere along the line a convention developed that the opening of a film was just a laundry list of credits. There was no incentive to complicate an area that was settled.

It's not even that finding laundry pleasurable or delightful should be our goal rather than finding television delightful. It's that both laundry and television can be delightful.

In a way it was like washing your laundry in public and, yep, there you go, you've seen my underwear. And now I feel like there's nothing left, you've seen it all and I can get on.

I love being a housewife... I love doing laundry. Except I have a little bit of separation anxiety, and you have to separate your laundry, so I have a little bit of a problem there.

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