In high school, I had a much easier time interacting with adults than with my peers.

I didn't make a lot of friends in high school. It's a cruel time, and I was very geeky.

By the time I was 15 and I stepped in the high school gym, I was just stronger than everybody.

By the time I got to George Washington University, I had been a straight-A student in high school.

At the time I finished high school, I was determined to study biology, deeply convinced to eventually be a researcher.

I was a professional baseball player from the time I was drafted out of high school in 1981 until the time I retired in 2003.

I was thin in high school and then I gained weight. I went to a nutritionist. I learned for the first time about what things are healthy to eat, basically.

I went to a Catholic high school and it seemed like every time I drew something for a class project, it either got thrown away by the teacher or something.

By the time I was in high school, Roe v. Wade had passed, so that was also happening; girls were getting pregnant and getting abortions - and that happened in my school too.

I was such a dork in high school. I like - I played sports. I played in the symphony. I auditioned all the time. I was thrown off the sports teams for auditioning all the time.

I wanted to draw and do costumes. I was prepared to train for that, but I needed something to do on my time off from high school, so I called an agent without telling anyone and started working with her.

Telling stories has been a compulsion of mine since I could physically say, 'Once upon a time...' But in high school, I realized I could study creative writing in college and actually pursue it as a viable career.

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