A Quote by Buck Brannaman

I'm still on the move, I'm getting better because I'm still studying. I still want to be a better horseman. — © Buck Brannaman
I'm still on the move, I'm getting better because I'm still studying. I still want to be a better horseman.
I still want to put together bigger and better programs to work with the community. I still think I could do better on that end.
I'm not saying that things now aren't better for black people. Thank God they're definitely better, but some things are still the same. "Better" is not good enough - it's not. Especially when "better" still means my life is at risk.
I feel like I'm still improving, still getting better, and I have a lot more to give in this sport.
I personally feel I still have so much to learn as a writer; each novel is better than the one before, just because I'm getting better at it.
The sport to which I owe so much has undergone profound changes, but it's still baseball. Kids still imitate their heroes on playgrounds. Fans still ruin expensive suits going after foul balls that cost five dollars. Hitting streaks still make the network news and hot dogs still taste better at the ballpark than at home.
People say it's better to know the truth, but what if the ending's a bad one? Is it still better to know? Or is it kinder to keep that string of hope dangling? To believe that maybe if you just wait long enough, everything could still end the way you want.
In the future, I want to be consistent from Day 1. We're still making adjustments. I still believe that I can be better.
A boxer should quit at the top, as they say. But that?s complicated. There are plenty of people in boxing who make money out off you. And they tell you that you?ve still got it, that it?s still getting better.
I got better as an actor, and still I'm getting better. That's only been possible because there's always been work.
I still feel like I have to go out there and get my job done and still produce. It's not about proving, it's about progressing and just getting better.
Loving kindness towards ourselves doesn't mean getting rid of anything. It means we can still be crazy after all these years. We can still be angry after all these years. We can still be timid or jealous or full of feelings of unworthiness. The point is not to try to throw ourselves away and become something better. It's about befriending who we are already.
I mean, you still can't jump offstage and go read a book. But I'm getting better at it. It is something you can manage. You can still give everything you have to the audience onstage, and have something for yourself.
I still think a reasonable question is, would we be better off with [Muamar] Gadhafi and Bashar al-Assad still in there and Mubarak still there and Saddam [Hussein] there than the crap we have got looking at us now?
I'm the exact same person I was before (cancer). I'm still shallow, I still love clothes, I still want to talk fashion, I still want to gossip, so lay it on me.
People think because it's photography it's not worth as much, and because it's a woman artist, you're still not getting as much - there's still definitely that happening. I'm still really competitive when it comes to, I guess, the male painters and male artists. I still think that's really unfair.
Television tells us only the things it wants to. It still feeds us heroes, it still offers villains. And even though we know better than to always trust it, we still watch.
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