A Quote by Ann Reinking

I'm happiest with my family and with working. — © Ann Reinking
I'm happiest with my family and with working.
I'm happiest in nature, in trees, rivers, streams, and I'm happiest around my kid - you know that's the funny thing, he is not always in the best of moods, but I am always happiest around him and in nature. Around my family is where I am happiest.
I'm happiest when I'm working. If I'm not working, I feel like I'm wasting my time.
It's critically important to have family around me, and some of my happiest moments are when I'm just with my family.
Family is the most important thing in the world. If everything ended tomorrow and my family was still there, I'd be the happiest man alive.
I balance family and career by doing what makes me the happiest! That for me, without question, is putting my family and kids first.
Against the long years when family bonds make up all that is happiest in life, there must always be reckoned those moments of agitation and revolution, during which the bosom of a family is the most unrestful and disturbing place in existence.
I am happiest in public, working in my world. Then I can be the star. That I can do. When I am not working, I am more guarded, set apart. It's not my life, that. I like interactions, but interaction that is not forced.
I'm happiest with my family around me.
All working parents should have paid family leave. That's one of many reasons I'm working to elect Hillary Clinton. She has a plan to guarantee workers - men and women - up to 12 weeks of paid family leave to care for a new child or a seriously ill family member.
The happiest people I know are the ones that are still working. The saddest are the ones who are retired. Very few performers retire on their own. It's usually because no one wants them. Six years ago Sinatra announced his retirement. He's still working.
It's the happiest time in my life when my family's all together.
I'm happiest when I'm discussing a script and working with interesting people.
I'm happiest at home hanging out with the kids... Having a family has been my saving grace because I don't work back to back on anything or I'd drive myself to an early grave with guilt and worry for my family, whom I'd never see.
I love writing, and I think I'm kind of a workaholic. I'm happiest when I'm working.
It doesn't matter whether you have the happiest upbringing... the young Joe Scot had the most dysfunctional family there could be but it's still a family and it's a really good, strong family. But in spite of that he runs away from home. I relate to all of those things very directly. I hit 40 this year but I still think about being a teenager and hopefully I will for the rest of my life. They are important years.
My happiest moments are when I'm with my family and when I go to the park at school with my friends.
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