A Quote by Justin Bartha

I do have rituals. I'm a fairly superstitious person. — © Justin Bartha
I do have rituals. I'm a fairly superstitious person.
Rituals, even unhappy ones, provide a measure of comfort. Like a superstitious ballplayer who will only use certain bats, my depression rituals have become a fixed, normal part of my life. ... I need rituals to prevent unnecessarily rocking my already shaky emotional boat.
I am not a sentimental or superstitious person, so I don't have any pre-performance rituals. I am a very practical woman. After a performance I am always hopeful that I will lure someone home for a ritual of a more personal nature.
I try not to have too many rituals because I believe that rituals don't help you win. I used to do rituals a lot and it was crazy.
I'm a very superstitious person. I come from a long line of superstitious people, so it's not going anywhere. For instance, we have this thing on our movies where if one of the key personnel gets a haircut in the middle of the movie, it's bad luck. I swear by that.
I have a half an hour warm-up I do that my voice teacher gave me. I exercise at least for an hour during the day. I don't have any superstitious rituals or anything like that.
I’m not superstitious. I’m a witch. Witches aren’t superstitious. We are what people are superstitious of.
I know that baseball players have certain rituals or habits that they develop, because sometimes it becomes somewhat superstitious if they get on a streak and want to do the same thing over and over again.
I'm a fairly happy-go-lucky person, generally fairly optimistic, but there were points when I was down.
I'm superstitious... but not like wear the same underwear for two weeks superstitious.
I'm superstitious ... but not like wear the same underwear for two weeks superstitious.
There is a comfort in rituals, and rituals provide a framework for stability when you are trying to find answers.
I am not a superstitious person.
Like the Pentagon, our social science often reduces all phenomena to dollars and body counts. Sexuality, family unity, kinship, masculine solidarity, maternity, motivation, nurturing, all the rituals of personal identity and development, all the bonds of community, seem "sexist," "superstitious," "mystical," "inefficient," "discriminatory." And, of course, they are -- and they are also indispensable to a civilized society.
I hate predicting football scores that mean a lot to me, because even though I'm an absolute materialist and don't believe in anything superstitious, I get superstitious.
I am a very superstitious person.
Rituals are comforting; rituals combat loneliness.
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