A Quote by Julian Lennon

You never know how your work is going to be received. — © Julian Lennon
You never know how your work is going to be received.
You never know how your work is going to be received, and to have it be not just received by the people who wanted it or knew about it or our traditional fan base, which is pretty big, but also having it spill over to everybody who plays games, and then those people telling everybody else who doesn't play games - that's what it became.
When you work on something in an edit room with just a couple of other people, you never know how it is going to be received.
You can have a good vibe and a good feeling about something, but you never really know how it's going to be received and how an audience is going to react to it.
You pour your soul into your book, but you never know how it will be received, and when people like your baby, it's a great feeling.
Fame will take care of itself. One thing I've learned about fame is that, hey, you can't control it. You don't know how you're going to be received or perceived when you step out of a car, when you arrive some place. And you never really know how big something is going to get, so you have to set some standards for yourself, and just abide by those.
For me there's insecurity when you're releasing an album because you spend all of this time working on that one thing and then once it's done, it's done. After you put it out there to the public you never know which songs are going to work or even if the album is going to work as a whole so there is a little bit of nervousness around predicting what the numbers will be and if it's going to be well-received.
You never know how you're going to be received, after all this time. The initial response we had was just overwhelming, particularly that tour of the States.
I think it's a mistake to try and overthink how you are going to be received, because that assumes that you are going to be received in the first place.
Any good writer is going to be well-received and is going to not be well-received; that's how you know you're a great writer.
On the one hand, you're the same person, but as you get older, you change somewhat, and you never know how it's going to affect your work.
You never know how things are going to fit. So, you don't count your eggs until they hatch. You can't pre-project that. I mean, this was literally like a childhood fantasy of mine, to be able to work in action. You know, growing up on Disney films like Pocahontas and wanting to enter into that, or Aladdin and how he's fighting - being your own hero, being your own heroine is like every one's dream.
The comics work is very slow, and it basically involves working for sometimes years in isolation and not knowing how the work is going to be received.
When you're releasing an album, you never know how it's going to go. You never know how a critic is going to receive it or how much it's going to sell.
Yeah, it can be dangerous to kind of try and target your art to a certain type of people! You don't know who's going to gravitate towards your work, you never know what people are going get out of the work. So I try and just create music that feels true to my taste, and then see what happens.
The secret is planning your work and working your plan. If you don't know where you are going, how will you know when you arrive? You can't stumble upon your destination.
Even in the civil rights movement, there were so many unbelievable women. They never, ever received the credit that they should have received. They did all of the, and I cannot say it, they did all of the dirty work. Hard work.
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