A Quote by Andrew Flintoff

I never really felt I belonged; there was always a sense of apartness. At school, I was the cricketer. — © Andrew Flintoff
I never really felt I belonged; there was always a sense of apartness. At school, I was the cricketer.
I was always kind of searching for the right social group in high school and never really felt like I belonged with any one specific clique.
I always thought competition was for horse races and it never belonged in art. I never felt that competitive with other girl singers, really.
I never felt that I belonged. When I was at school... First I went to a Jewish school, when I was very little. But when I was 12, they put me in a school with a lot of traditions, and they were educated people and they were talking about Greece and the Parthenon and I don't know what.
I moved to Milan when I was 15. I was always looking for something; I never really felt like I belonged where I was, so I went to live overseas.
I am realising this now more as I grow up: that I never really felt connected to locations. In some sense, I always kind of felt a little lost in that I never had any hometown pride. While I experience a lot different places and experiences, I always felt a little detached.
I never felt I belonged. I was always an outsider.
I never really felt like I belonged in California.
I felt like an alien. I always felt like I never belonged to any group that I wanted to belong to.
Growing up, I never really felt like anything was my own. I moved a lot, and I never belonged anywhere.
I want to be a good cricketer, but I am a person first and a cricketer second. I won't always be a cricketer, but I will always be a person.
Kids don't like what they don't understand, and judo was always my social outlet. I always felt really socially awkward, and I couldn't speak very well when I was younger. When I was doing judo, it was something that I could understand and someplace where I felt that I belonged and fit in.
I just never felt like I belonged anywhere. I always had a stick with a little knapsack attached.
Ruin still used Reen's voice-it was familiar, something that had always seemed a part of her. Discovering that it belonged to that thing...it was like finding out that her reflection really belonged to someone else, and that she'd never actually seen herself.
In high school I was the dog, always, and I never have felt comfortable or right in my body, and part of my whole exhibitionist thing has probably been a way of testing to see whether or not I really was this repulsive creature that I felt like for so long.
I've always felt like an outsider as a woman. I've never really felt wholly comfortable in a women's world or woman's things. I've never been conventionally pretty or thin or girly-girl. Never felt dateable. All I've seen on TV has never felt like mine.
When I was growing up, I never felt that I belonged anywhere because we never lived in a house for more than three months. That's all I knew, and that's why I don't really belong anywhere.
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