A Quote by Brad Goreski

I'm very proud of my sobriety now. — © Brad Goreski
I'm very proud of my sobriety now.
But people ought to be proud to be Democrats right now. You know, we're a happy warrior party. And this Congress has every reason to be very, very proud of the heavy lifting that they have done.
I've been sober now for a couple of years and I'm taking my sobriety very seriously - one day at a time and I am moving forward in my career.
And I come from a very proud Hispanic family. We're proud to be Latino. We're proud to be Peruvian. And my dad's side is proud to be Puerto Rican.
Let the jagged edge of sobriety be now dulled.
I'm very proud of what I do, and I want as many people to be aware of it as possible. I'm very proud of what I believe. I'm very proud of my country. I want everybody to be. I really do. It may sound like pie-in-the-sky, but I want everybody to love America as I do.
I'm proud of Toronto. I'm proud of Canada. I'm proud of the NBA. I'm very proud of it.
Now I have a very good life and I am very proud of my work.
I'm very progressive in a lot of ways, but I'm a very proud American. It sounds so corny to say, but I am and have always been very... I'm just so proud. I don't ever not want to live in America.
I'm a proud strict mom and, you know, I'm really proud of the two daughters I've raised. And I'm especially proud of my relationship with them. We're very close. I think we're good friends.
something has been said for sobriety but very little.
I'm very proud with how my story has gone. I've played for some very big teams, and it is not normal how I got there. It is a dream for every player to have this kind of career, so I am very proud of this.
I've always been a proud member of all the relays - and we've had such success in that - but to get that gold individually, I'm very proud and very honored.
I'm still a proud Irishman, of course, but I've become an American citizen. I'm very, very proud of that.
I have other obligations now - the show, my family, my life... though I know that without my sobriety I wouldn't have any of those things.
I'd rather that England should be free than that England should be compulsorily sober. With freedom we might in the end attain sobriety, but in the other alternative we should eventually lose both freedom and sobriety.
It goes without saying that moderation and sobriety are of the very essence of vow-taking.
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