A Quote by Adam Peaty

I've become the hunted. I'm enjoying that. It's better to be the hunted than the hunter. — © Adam Peaty
I've become the hunted. I'm enjoying that. It's better to be the hunted than the hunter.
It is much easier to be the hunter than the hunted. When you are the one not expected to do anything, you play better.
... the ears of the hunted grow even keener than a hunter's.
This world's divided into two kinds of people: the hunter and the hunted. Luckily I'm the hunter. Nothing can change that.
Be the hunter, not the hunted.
You can be the hunter, or you can be the hunted.
Before I was the hunter. Now I'm the hunted.
Freedom is nothing but the distance between the hunter and the hunted.
In searching for the self, one cannot simultaneously be the hunter and the hunted.
Until you have hunted men, you haven’t hunted yet.
Be the hunter, not the hunted: Never allow your unit to be caught with its guard down.
When you're huntin' somepin you're a hunter, an' you're strong. Can't nobody beat a hunter. But when you get hunted - that's different. Somepin happens to you. You ain't strong: maybe you're fierce, but you ain't strong." - Muley
Disappointment and adversity can be catalysts for greatness. There's something particularly exciting about being the hunter, as opposed to the hunted. And that can make for powerful energy.
I've always been a rodent and rabbit hunter - small varmints, if you will. I began when I was 15 or so, and I have hunted those kinds of varmints since then.
Hunting is now to most of us a game, whose relish seems based upon some mystic remembrance, in the blood, of ancient days when to hunter as well as hunted it was a matter of life and death.
In our rather stupid time, hunting is belittled and misunderstood, many refusing to see it for the vital vacation from the human condition that it is, or to acknowledge that the hunter does not hunt in order to kill; on the contrary, he kills in order to have hunted.
What do women do when they get together? We sit around and talk! Men, not so much. My theory is that this difference is genetic and dates back to the hunter-gatherer societies, when the men had to be quiet as they hunted, lest they scare away the bison and then everyone starved to death and it was all their fault.
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