I always have confidence in myself even though everyone doubted me.

My mum and dad were always supportive of me. They always let me express myself.

But I always see myself as the filmmaker. I wonder if everybody else sees me more as an actor.

Team spirit spurs me on. I've always found it easier to be strong for other people than for myself.

I kind of pride myself in the fact that when people hire me it's always considered creative casting.

I think it's helped me to have two unconventional parents, who have always encouraged me to be myself.

I always defined myself in terms of my talkativeness, and being without a voice hits me in a number of ways.

For me, I'm always hard on myself no matter what, so that's always a thing I have to deal with on a daily basis.

Acting has always been a way for me to express myself, and show all my vulnerabilities and flaws through my characters.

I always saw myself as really ugly. My father even told me I was ugly because I would shave my head and look like a boy.

For me, it's always been about continually challenging myself and continually figuring out how to go down the hill faster.

I always saw myself as a singer-songwriter, a solo-artist, that's why working with other artists was never satisfying for me.

I am a contradiction myself. I'm always looking for something that scares me because when I'm not scared, I'm not stimulated.

Somebody has always wanted me to speak as a voice of black America, but it has dawned on me that I can only speak for myself.

I always try to make myself be very approachable and easy to talk to, so hopefully people will feel that they can approach me.

I've always studied our empires to empower myself, you know, and to have ammunition against anybody who could try to put me down.

I find myself gravitating towards drama. It interests me. In the books I read, the paintings I like, it's always the darker stuff.

I always ask myself, would I want someone to do something that wasn't comfortable for them just to please me? And the answer is no.

For me, I've always told myself, 'I can only do me in the ring.' When I go out there and perform, I can only do what Sasha Banks can do.

I always say that when I'm playing well, no one can beat me. I'm not just saying that to sound full of myself or anything, but it's true.

The scars on the face have always given me a sense that I'm not a very attractive person. I'm always unsure of myself, of my facial self.

I think people have always liked in me the combination of being the underdog because I'm a tiny woman but I have enormous authority in myself.

I suppose it's the feminist in me, but I didn't always associate modelling with an intelligent career. I used to put myself down for doing it.

When somebody asks me who I'm wearing, I always see myself with a BabyBjoern, carrying a little tiny Karl Lagerfeld, like, 'I'm wearing Chanel.'

I think for me I'm always... I find myself to be a very curious person when something interests me and I find that I'm attracted to that mystery.

Throughout my rapping career, I always cooked for myself and anyone I worked with. It's what actually kept me grounded through those crazy years.

You know, for years I used to read about myself. They'd say, 'He has a temper' or 'He's a bully' or something like that, and it always bothered me.

There was many who had some doubts over me regarding my position in this sport, but I've always believed in myself and that's the way it's always been.

No disrespect to county cricket but when you're playing for England it is the ultimate, it is what has always driven me to push myself above and beyond.

I was always very proud of myself that I could wrest emotion from a doll or a puppet. It never occurred to me that I could find real emotion in a person.

I always tried to align myself with strategic partners, friends, and information to help me with the things that I did not know, and ultimately, I made it.

I've always liked my clothes, even before I could properly afford them. Clothes for me were never a cloak, a cover. They were how I chose to express myself.

I've never seen myself as a spokesperson. I've always seen myself as a worker and am very grateful for the trust that my own people have given me over the years.

I am a conservative type of person, so sometimes when I'm chilling with myself, people always come ask me, 'What's wrong with you? What are you wondering about?'

I always knew I was going to grow up to be a storyteller; that's one of the earliest things I remember about myself. There was never a question of me not writing.

I always wanted to do NBA Cares but they didn't want me to represent the league. I just did Matt Cares instead. I went to Africa by myself to do camps and clinics.

I like making fun of myself a lot. I like being made fun of, too. I've always enjoyed it. There's just something really, really funny about someone tearing into me.

I've always been someone who, without wanting to or without trying to, I draw attention to myself sometimes in negative ways. It made me sharp, and it made me quick.

I've never gone against any manager, nor have I talked badly about any coach, I've always thrown myself at any challenge handed to me and tried to understand and learn.

For me, comedy literally is way more terrifying than doing drama, so it's always about stretching what I think I can do and putting myself out there in different context.

I try to live intentionally, and the things that move me, I'm going to throw myself at them. I want to see what my potential is. I'm always curious to see what the edge is.

People always call me a comedian. And I don't really see myself like that. I guess I just consider myself an actor who does comedy. But who wants to do other things as well.

My parents are both very stylish, so they always encouraged me to explore when it came to personal style. I went through a lot of crazy phases, and I'm still finding myself.

I've always been the guy that loved being scared or loved having pressure on me, because I always wanted to prove myself wrong and always wanted to prove that I could do it.

It's always frustrated me when I've seen other players able to smack balls over the bowler's head and stuff like that. I can't, though. When I've tried I've let myself down.

The NBA is a predominately black league. And me kind of being the anomaly in that sense, I've always tried to commit myself to being an ally and taking those necessary steps.

As cliche as it sounds, I've always told myself, 'Don't worry about the things you can't control. Control the things you can control.' That battle has beat up on me for years.

I've never really been aware of what is said about me, whether it's positive or negative. I ignore it. I've always had the mind-set: 'No one can challenge me better than myself.'

I've always wanted to be independent and answer for myself. That probably is the part of me I would class to be feminist. I'd like to have children; marriage I have a bit of an issue with.

I've never paid too much attention to what other people have said or to what other people have tried to make me be. I've always just tried to be myself, which is such a weird thing to say.

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