I surround myself with people who make me laugh.

Good-looking people turn me off. Myself included.

People call me slow. I call myself quick with the stuff I do.

Maybe other people will try to limit me but I don't limit myself.

My opinion about myself is so based on what other people think of me.

People compare me to Batistuta, and he is the player I base myself on.

People ask me for autographs now and I think to myself: 'Are you sure?'

What people say isn't going to stop me. I have to do things for myself.

People called me the godmother of punk, but I never name myself anything.

I cared too much about people liking me because I didn't like myself enough.

I feel like people are expecting me to fail; therefore, I expect myself to win.

My secret is just surrounding myself with people who are a lot funnier than me.

If there are negative people around me, I just try to distance myself from that.

I've come to realize that the more I censor myself, the less people relate to me.

I talk to myself out loud at times, and feel embarrassed when people overhear me.

If I put myself on the ballot and even 50 people voted for me, it'd be a travesty.

This is something people don't realize about me, but I can laugh - and laugh at myself.

The two years I spent solely writing for other people kind of took me away from myself.

People would expect me to be this ditzy, bubblegum-pop girl. I was selling myself short.

I don't know if I can call myself underrated. Maybe some people may overrate me. Who knows?

I want to win. For myself first. And for all those people who stuck with me and understood.

I'm so glad that I didn't give up on myself and there were people who didn't give up on me.

Each film has taught me something new - be it about myself, my craft, my profession, people.

People ask me to describe myself, but it's a very personal thing. You don't feel comfortable.

I don't see myself as subversive. I just don't necessarily buy what people tell me initially.

I don't think of myself as a kind of celebrity, but wherever I go, people know me; they greet me.

I know some people count me out, but that's the one thing about myself, I never count myself out.

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

I don't let people say mean things to me! I don't surround myself with people who'd want to do that.

If you're asking me to compare myself to other people, I don't really know what other people are like.

It's hard for me to characterise myself. I think I'm balanced. Some people might say I'm cold-hearted.

I appreciate that people think that, give me the comparisons to LeBron, but I'm not LeBron. I'm myself.

I know I come off differently than I think of myself. I'm always surprised by what people say about me.

I think that as a public figure, I put myself out there so people can ask me anything they want to ask me.

Sometimes I introduce myself to people, and their reaction reminds me that it's insane that my name is Beanie.

I've never concerned myself with the labels people want to put on you. What matters to me is my own estimation.

If I didn't define myself for myself, I would be crunched into other people's fantasies for me and eaten alive.

I don't listen to people's opinions. I have people around me who I can trust, but most of all I listen to myself.

I tune it all out because if I let other people's stress get to me, then I stress myself out more than I need to.

It was me that was holding myself back because I felt like I had to fit into this mold of what people want to see.

I surround myself with people that have certain strengths that are my weaknesses so they push me in certain areas.

For me, I've never really thought of myself as labeled as a shooter or whatever. People can say whatever they want.

I get a lot of really nice messages from girls who are like, 'You make me wanna be myself because people accept it.'

I mean, if people still want to hire my 34-year-old fat butt for campaigns and let me be myself then I'm all for it.

For me, It's not necessarily about proving people wrong, but proving to myself that I can do it my way and still win.

I learned that surrounding myself with people who are able to help me is like being surrounded by tangible godliness.

I realized I had been keeping people around even when deep down I knew they were bad for me. I had overridden myself.

I definitely am more observational of the people around me and how they interact and less introspective about myself.

You are changed by the people you are closest to, and this has allowed me to forgive myself for the person I once was.

Billy Gunn, Bill DeMott, and Dusty Rhodes all helped me find myself and how to express it to people so they understand.

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