I am infinitely grateful to the life which privileged me.

Bigger than life is not difficult for me. I am bigger than life.

Wherever I am in my life, it's because rugby has enabled me to do that.

I am sensitive to life, and somehow acting comes to me. I can't explain it.

I am convinced that life is 10% what happens to me and 96% how I react to it.

I am too insecure to crash early. I feel life will pass me by while I'm sleeping.

I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. No one comes to the Father except through me.

The image you see of me out in public is really different from who I am in real life.

My personal life was very important for me, the people I am with, my friends, where I go.

I am not a perfectionist. Perfection doesn't exist in real life. It's a wrong title for me.

I am a friend of life, at 80 life tells me to behave like a woman and not like an old woman.

I am very confident about my color. It has never deterred me from achieving anything in life.

I think people kind of know me, although I am pretty private when it comes to my private life.

I am very different in real life as compared to whatever people have seen of me on the big screen.

Let me be clear: I am sick of having to criticise the club which I gave my life to as a footballer.

Basketball without Borders made me who I am and it's just something that is such a huge part of my life.

I am shamelessly biased about the people in my life, and it makes sense to me that other people are the same.

I do practice active gratitude. In my thoughts, actions words I am deeply grateful for what life has given me.

No longer do I have these terrible complexes I had when I was younger, and I am able to enjoy what life's offering me.

I am drawn to people who are like me - who have experienced the ups and downs of life but have come through the other side.

I'm not particularly affable in real life, I have to tell you. I've got that side to me, of course, but that's not all I am.

I would have liked children, but I am not all disappointed. I've had a lot of stuff thrown at me in life so I don't dwell on it.

I am waiting for a sign that will indicate to me what meaning I must give to my life, but right now my existence is satisfactory.

Fortunately, dance has been what's interested me all my life. So whether I am faced with incapacities or not, it still absorbs me.

I am a goofy person, really. That's where my energy goes, that's how I live my life. The goof gene is very strong inside me, really.

I am not the kind of person who narrates every aspect of my life on social media; it's about posting things that are important to me.

People come up to me and say, 'Can I just thank you for writing my life?' And I reply, 'I'm glad someone else is as idiotic as I am.'

It has taken me most of my adult life to come to terms with who I am. To do that, I had to break free of attitudes that brought me down.

The notion of looking on at life has always been hateful to me. What am I if I am not a participant? In order to be, I must participate.

I am not going to share my private life with millions of people. I don't find a need to do that and nobody else close to me does either.

Life moves so fast, my friend. I am just lucky and happy to have the people I care about there along with me, watching all of this occur.

I needed to go through certain life experiences, and not just on the court, to make me into the competitor that I am, and also the person.

I've been wrestling since I was 4 years old, so I have over 30 years in some form of wrestling, non-stop in my life. For me, it's who I am.

I feel the emotion that life conjures up and the songs I write get me closer to my feelings and realising who I am. It's a natural process.

People tell me that my appearance in real life is better than on-screen. Perhaps people think I am exactly like the characters I play on TV.

In the beginning, I was doing whatever came my way. But that's how life is. I am not sitting around calling a 'daddy' to make a movie for me.

Everybody I interacted with in my life, directly or indirectly, has placed a fingerprint upon my life. That combination has made me who I am.

I talk to everyone - Uber drivers, bartenders. On Twitter, people see me as some mean guy, but in real life, I am out there asking questions.

My parents are my role models. All they've done for me, they're just major people in my life. They've stood by me and got me where I am today.

I've been recognized for much of my life but I learned that when I was fatter I am less recognizable so I got fat but then it almost killed me.

I am very lucky, because for the most part people are very nice to me, and I am still able to go about my life and ride the subway and all that.

I am a spy in the house of me. I report back from the front lines of the battle that is me. I am somewhat nonplused by the event that is my life.

It took me a while and a lot of hard times to figure out my purpose, I am so happy with my life. I just want to help make other people happy, too.

For the rest of my life, I realise people are going to ask questions of me, but at the end of the day, I am a clean athlete, and I have worked hard.

I am lucky in that I have never been depressed in my life, but this is the one thing which has really affected me: the loss of my mother as I knew her.

I like everything a certain way. I'm not somebody who can just lay back and let it happen... And I think that's what's gotten me to where I am in life.

Let me be clear: I am a Methodist. By that, I mean I think John Wesley was a recovery of Catholic Christianity through disciplined congregational life.

Absolutely I view life from a different perspective than I did in my past. It's rewarding, to me, because it actually lets me know that I am growing up.

I am someone who worries a lot. I'm always worrying 'what if?' Now I'm a mum - there will be worries for the rest of my life, but they're not about me anymore.

Artistically I am still a child with a whole life ahead of me to discover and create. I want something, but I won't know what it is until I succeed in doing it.

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