I always feel that I compete with myself.

I feel like I'm always fighting not to repeat myself.

I feel like I've always thought of myself as a comedian.

I always think I put more pressure on myself than I feel from anywhere else.

I have always enjoyed myself. Sometimes I feel guilty about enjoying myself so much.

I always choose songs that I have an emotional connection to, and I often feel myself getting very emotional when I sing.

You can always draw as well as you know how to. I flatter myself that I feel more than I express on canvas; but I know that is not so.

I always thought of myself as inadequate. Kids of divorced parents always feel that way - that, on some subconscious level, they're responsible.

Going forward, what I can accomplish, I always have seen myself playing in the playoffs, playing deep, and winning. I want to be part of that and feel that.

I've always thought of myself as an organic writer, rather than a cerebral one. I feel my way along as I go, hoping I'll get to the place I intend to reach.

I always told myself never to have a plan B - I feel like that's also one of the reasons I'm doing what I'm doing now, because I just never really rested until I got here.

I don't feel any pressure from fans. But I'm always in some kind of state of emotional turmoil. I would not describe myself as happy-go-lucky. That's not to say that I'm not happy.

I don't feel when I'm writing that I'm drawing from any other writer, but of course I must be. The writers I've admired have been not so very different from myself: Evelyn Waugh, for example, that kind of crystalline prose. And I've always admired W. Somerset Maugham more than any other writer.

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