A Quote by Kane Brown

Growing up, I never had a steady home. — © Kane Brown
Growing up, I never had a steady home.
The idea of being at home and picking up kids from school and cooking dinner and then the husband comes home - there's something that seems really nice to me 'cause I never had that growing up. And it seems so enticing. But in my mind, I'm like, 'Well, I'll just play that in a movie and go about my own life, bizarre as it is.'
We'd had books in my house growing up, but we had never had anything like lectures. I had never written an essay for my mother. I had never taken an exam. Because I was working a lot as a kid, I just hadn't elected to read that much.
Sometimes we're so concerned about giving our children what we never had growing up, we neglect to give them what we did have growing up.
I'm steady learning and growing and stepping up in competition.
I am not taking a position on any policy, but I do think there is a growing sense of anxiety and even anger in America over the feeling that the game is rigged. And I never had that feeling when I was growing up. Never.
Children can withstand a lot of pressure and trial from the outside if the home inside is held steady by parents whose character is steady.
Growing up, my uncle used to always have dogs, and we always had a dog growing up. I couldn't remember a time when I never had a dog. It was part of the family. So once I actually got old enough, I got a dog in college, then I felt he needed a friend, so I got another dog. They just started adding up from there.
I have never had any animal growing up, never had a hamster, bird, dog, or cat.
Growing up is a process that never ends. It isn't a point you attain so you can say, Hooray, I'm grown up. Some people never grow up. And nobody ever finishes growing. Or shouldn't. If you stop you might as well quit. What I have to tell you is that it never gets any easier. It goes right on being rough forever. But nothing that's easy is worth anything. You ought to have learned that by now. What happens as you keep on growing is that all of a sudden you realize that it's more exciting and beautiful than scary and awful.
At home, growing up, we weren't really poor. We had everything we needed, we just didn't have what we wanted.
I wish I had been home more when the children were growing up. I missed a lot.
I had the French culture at school and I love this culture but I also had another culture at home - that of Senegal. I think this way of growing up has made me the person I am today - because I had the two cultures.
Growing up, I would never have thought that I'd be a double Olympic champion, with a lovely home and beautiful kids.
My father was never very friendly. When I was growing up, I thought the doorbell ringing was a signal to pretend you weren't home.
We weren't allowed to have secular music in the house growing up. I was home-schooled, and gospel was the only choice we had.
I'm most at peace in my home when there's chaos, and that means that my kids had their friends over a lot growing up.
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