A Quote by Lance Bass

For once I want to have a relationship outside the public eye. — © Lance Bass
For once I want to have a relationship outside the public eye.
The common eye sees only the outside of things, and judges by that, but the seeing eye pierces through and reads the heart and the soul, finding there capacities which the outside didn't indicate or promise, and which the other kind of eye couldn't detect.
No relationship is easier just because you're in the public eye.
Once you start to provide public services that have to be run under public rules, for example child protection, then it has to go with public law. Institutions have to make a decision whether they want to do that or they don't want to do that.
The bad news for journalists today is that the media, however seriously people who are in the public eye take it, is not taken as seriously as it once was - by the public.
When you're a woman, you have such a strange relationship with your body because - especially when you're in the public eye - you're constantly being judged.
To me the biggest irony of this lifetime that I'm living is that for someone who thrives in the public eye in the creative ways that I do, I actually don't enjoy being in the public eye.
For Sabina, living in truth, lying neither to ourselves nor to others, was possible only away from the public: the moment someone keeps an eye on what we do, we involuntarily make allowances for that eye, and nothing we do is truthful. Having a public, keeping a public in mind, means living in lies.
Once I got in the public eye there was no going back.
Once you've been in the public eye, you are always going to be criticised.
There is often little to distinguish what Beijing wants from what Canada's foreign affairs mandarins want out of the Canada-China relationship, which is in any case rarely even close to what Canadians want - like some demonstrable public benefit for once, the opinion polls consistently show.
In general, I feel very happy with how I got to have time on my own at least a little bit outside of the public eye.
What works in a relationship of very public people is not making the relationship public - keeping it as personal as it can be. It's the only way it is real.
For me, it's important to ask what are you making, and what's the public's relationship to that. And I say public relationship because I don't really care so much about any sort of reception.
Once you're put out there in the public eye, people feel a certain ownership over you.
Turkey's relationship with the West is a love-hate one. There are people in Turkey who want to open to the outside world and others who are frightened of the outside world. They don't feel secure; they think that foreigners are trying to harm or even destroy Turkey. But that's not true of the majority of Turks, who want to exercise their skills in a global market.
Once you enter the public's eye, you have to be aware that you give up a huge part of your own life.
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