A Quote by Nikita Parris

I'm confident in myself. It's not a case of I've missed a penalty, and I'm down. — © Nikita Parris
I'm confident in myself. It's not a case of I've missed a penalty, and I'm down.
I wanted to be a dancer my whole life. And when I gave it up to act, I always had a really sad part of myself that missed it and missed performing and missed being physical in that way.
That was the perfect penalty - apart from he missed it.
The biggest government waste: The death penalty. An individual death-penalty case could climb to $100 million, much of it spent at the litigation level. Also, DNA evidence has exonerated nearly 300 death-row inmates.
[When] I was young and I listened to everything - I took everything to heart. I didn't really realize how much people want to talk badly about you when you're down, or kick you when you're down. As basketball players, people think everybody's ultra-confident. But that's not the case.
In some ways, I was confident as a teenager - I didn't mind standing on stage in front of loads of people - but innately, I didn't believe in myself. I would always put myself down before anyone else could.
I am confident when I take the penalty otherwise I would pass for somebody else.
Join the club. (to Robbie Fowler after the striker missed a penalty against Middlesbrough that cost Man City a European place)
I do not throw myself down in the area, looking for a penalty, because I believe we should try to do things without being cursed and angry and without spitting on life.
I used to cry myself to sleep every night. I missed singing so much. And performing. Man, I missed it so much.
I was confident in my ability. It's why I decided to walk on to a bigger school, in the Big 12: because I was confident in myself.
After I became confident in Him it didn't matter what anyone said because I was confident in something and someone way bigger than myself.
In our period, they say there is free speech. They say there is no penalty for poets, There is no penalty for writing poems. They say this. This is the penalty.
In Alabama this would be a capital case, and if we don't get justice in Australia we're going to pursue the death penalty here
I was happy working for the N.B.A., but to be honest, I decided that I'd probably get back into coaching. I missed the teaching, I missed the games, I missed the competition.
The death penalty serves no one. It doesn't serve the victims. It doesn't serve prevention. It's truly all about retribution....There comes a time when you have to ask if a penalty that is so permanent can be available in such an imperfect system. The only guarantee against executing the innocent is to do away with the death penalty.
This case has had full analyzation and has been looked at a lot. I understand the emotionality of death penalty cases.
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