A Quote by Ant McPartlin

I've re-evaluated everything in my life. — © Ant McPartlin
I've re-evaluated everything in my life.
An artist can only be evaluated after he's dead. At the 11th hour he might do something that will eclipse everything else.
An artist can be truly evaluated only after he is dead. At the very 11th hour, he might do something that will eclipse everything else.
I thought if I looked back and evaluated my life, it would help me in the future.
At the end of your life on earth you will be evaluated and rewarded according to how well you handled what God entrusted to you.
Every decision we make has to be evaluated in light of our life-changing commitment to being a servant of Christ and His kingdom.
In the family, life is brought not only to our doorstep, but into our kitchens, bedrooms, and dens. In the family, life is happening all around us, and it begs to be questioned, evaluated, interpreted, and discussed. There is no more consistent, pregnant, dynamic forum for instruction about life than the family, because that is exactly what God designed the family to be, a learning community.
Obviously, you're being evaluated every single week, and you want to perform every single week. It's just going out there and doing everything possible to help the team win.
Experience teaches nothing, but evaluated experience teaches everything.
I think everyone goes through chapters in their life and there was a time when I wasn't feeling terribly positive about what I was contributing to film, or wasn't feeling as if I was going in the direction I wanted and I re-evaluated what I was doing.
I'm the kind of person that believes that I would like to be evaluated by my entire career and my entire life, not two words that I would misspeak and then later apologize for.
The best teacher for a leader is evaluated experience.
Experiences isn't the best teacher?-?evaluated experience is.
I'm not a competitor by nature, and I'm certainly not used to being evaluated.
The No. 1 stat is wins. As a quarterback, you get evaluated on winning.
I think a player should be evaluated for what he does on the playing field.
To edit someone from your life must be a properly evaluated decision. After all, the act of distancing yourself is difficult and, if executed improperly, could prove even more troublesome than if you were to have done nothing at all. The key is to create the distance gradually - a 'fade out' as I like to call it.
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