The other day, I was walking my dog around my building . . . on the ledge. Some people are afraid of heights. Not me, I'm afraid of widths.
A climb-out fight is where you climb a building. You climb fire escapes. You climb to the top of the building. You fight on the roof, and you fight all the way down again.
Highest of heights, I climb this mountain and feel one with the rock and grit and solitude echoing back at me.
I'm afraid one thing - I don't like heights. Heights bug me out. I'm not cool with heights. I refuse to do a comedy show 12 stories up. I'm fearless about everything else.
I’m afraid of heights. Not unreasonably, but rationally afraid of heights. I think everyone is.
I'm afraid of heights. Not unreasonably, but rationally afraid of heights. I think everyone is.
Back in our day, if you wanted someone to go up the side of a building, he had to put a harness and a cable on and really climb the building! For what it was, it had a certain charm.
I may climb perhaps to no great heights, but I will climb alone.
I am afraid of heights and water, but I haven't been able to shake off my fear of cockroaches.
I was always the guy who jumped off the roof of the garage, who could climb up the facade of a building.
Those who believe they can't repel the positive; they use the negative side of their talisman. Those who believe they can repel the negative; they use the positive side.
With ideas it is like with dizzy heights you climb: At first they cause you discomfort and you are anxious to get down, distrustful of your own powers; but soon the remoteness of the turmoil of life and the inspiring influence of the altitude calm your blood; your step gets firm and sure and you begin to look - for dizzier heights.
We are afraid of ourselves and our own unconscious minds. When we are building something that reflects us, it's the one thing we're all afraid to face. We're afraid to face ourselves. Building machines that mirror our consciousness is a very frightening proposition because we have seen how evil people can be.
My husband says that I'm afraid of heights, but that's not true. What I'm afraid of is falling.
I'm not afraid of heights, but the idea of falling from them, well, that I'm afraid of.
A lot of people are afraid of heights. Not me, I'm afraid of widths.