A Quote by Leighton Meester

Wear your heart on your sleeve and be kind. And just be the way you are-what you see is what you get. — © Leighton Meester
Wear your heart on your sleeve and be kind. And just be the way you are-what you see is what you get.
Just because I don't wear my heart on my sleeve - " "You don't even wear your heart in your chest.
It's hard: you get older, you have a career, the normal frustrations that come with what you do when you wear your heart on your sleeve and you try really heard. I was exhausted, and I couldn't quite see the magic of creating at that time. That's all. I couldn't get into it, and Andy [Kim] slowly resuscitated me, and that's how I made Darlings.
To wear your heart on your sleeve isn't a very good plan; you should wear it inside, where it functions best.
Don't wear your heart on your sleeve when your remarks are off the cuff.
Be spectacularly great at what you do. Wear your passion on your sleeve and hold your heart in the palm of your hand. And work hard. Really hard.
Sometimes , with the way you've been brought up, you try to just put your heart on your sleeve and play anywhere.
But you now, you wear your soul on your sleeve, exhausting your energy, propping yourself up on a tree, mumbling, or bent over your desk, asleep. Heaven gives you a form and you wear it out by pointless argument.
I'm kind of a warrior for love, and I wear my heart on my sleeve.
You have one heart, and once you give it away, it's gone. If you wear it on your sleeve, a lot of people are there to take advantage of it.
The people who are garrulous and wear their heart on their sleeve and tell you everything, that's one kind of person, but the fellow who's hiding behind a tree and hoping you don't see him is the fellow that you'd better find out why.
I don't tour the TV studios. I don't gossip over lunch. I don't drink in Parliament's bars. I don't wear my heart on my sleeve. I just get on with the job in front of me.
I just want to wear my heart on my sleeve.
When you're competing, you have to wear a sleeve that goes all the way down to your wrist. When you're training, you usually don't wear long-sleeved leotards, so there's a difference between training and competing.
It’s time to write dangerous music. It’s time to take risks. It’s time to wear your heart on your sleeve, and sing about the things that actually matter to you. It’s time to bury the shackles of religious expectation and stop trying to put new clothes on the dead.
Don't be afraid to show your feelings. Wear your heart on your sleeves. The right one will see
I think as long as you wear your imperfections on your sleeve, people respect it more.
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