Kids get influenced by other kids.

Like many other kids, I liked watching anime.

When I was a kid, I was afraid of other kids.

I was the kid who was too geeky for the other kids.

Other kids had more talent, but I was the most focused.

I always felt like I was mentally tougher than the other kids.

Other kids were watching John Elway. I was watching Tom Landry.

Other kids did drugs; I did crafts. I never knew where I fit in.

I had long eyelashes and the other kids used to say I wore mascara.

The other kids wanted to play Destiny's Child, but I wanted Anita O'Day.

I weighed 84 pounds when I was 14. I was an easy target for the other kids.

Kids need other kids, they need school. But we also don't need an epidemic.

I paid for my name a lot when I was growing up because other kids teased me.

I remember being bullied at school, and I remember being cruel to other kids.

My kids still think that, you know, other kids' parents are cooler than I am.

The problem is foster youth don't really have this network that other kids have.

I would play with numbers in a way that other kids would play with their friends.

I had a lot of Pokemon Pikachu t-shirts on court and hand-me-downs from other kids.

I was not developmentally disabled, but didn't mature at the same rate other kids did.

Like other kids wanted to become firemen or astronauts, I wanted to make people laugh.

Other kids went out and beat each other up or played baseball, and I built electronics.

What I remember as a child is that other kids didn't care about suffering. I always did.

While other kids were into New Kids on the Block, I was into Harold Lloyd and Stan Laurel.

Other kids would be playing with their Action Man, and I was questioning life and society.

I ended up being exposed to cinema that a lot of other kids wouldn't have been exposed to.

I was made fun of by a lot of other kids in such a way that I didn't feel like I was human.

I used to get called Lady Penelope at school because the other kids thought I spoke nicely.

We hung out on the streets, played stickball, and did all of the things that other kids did.

When all the other kids were playing sports after school, I wanted to sing and dance and act.

I never had a chance to play with dolls like other kids. I started working when I was six years old.

Instead of being like the other kids going to soccer or football practice, I was wrestling every day.

Millions of Mexicans leave their kids in order to take care of other kids. That's a very painful thing.

Every boy needs a role model that he can be proud of and talk about to the other kids in the playground.

Even the other kids who people made fun of made fun of me. That's where I stood on the school food chain.

While other kids played with cars and toys, I listened to music all day. I wanted to sing it and learn it.

I always wonder what my life would be like if I had parents like the other kids who went to my high school.

The way other kids would watch 'The Little Mermaid' or 'Sesame Street,' I would watch 'Fiddler on the Roof.'

I kind of picked up the game at an early age. The way that other kids would learn what a fork or a spoon is.

I was nervous to even talk to other kids in my class. I would hide in my room when my parents had people over.

Basketball gave me an avenue to live my dream, and I just want to help other kids live their dreams through me.

When I went to school, I was already reading and writing. In fact, I was offended that the other kids couldn't.

From the time I started school, it was clear to everyone that I wasn't learning at the same pace as other kids.

This may sound strange, but at a very early age, at around 3, I was aware that I was smarter than the other kids.

I feel like I had as normal a childhood as anyone, but it had a certain focus. Maybe other kids focused on sports.

Honestly, I had no idea I was different from other kids until I started kindergarten. To my family, I was just Lizzie.

I think I used comedy as a mechanism: if I could make the other kids laugh, I wouldn't get beaten up or teased as much.

I spent a lot of time star-gazing, writing, and learning languages when the other kids were doing cooler things in Detroit.

There were always other children in our house, even though I'm an only child - there were always these other kids coming by.

At school, I was a lot more advanced compared to the other kids but I didn't like authority and was kicked out for fighting.

Because I was a bit smaller than the other kids, my dad knew that winning the ball in the air wasn't going to be easy for me.

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