A Quote by Nina Agdal

At the end of the day, there should be no judgment or body shaming on anyone. — © Nina Agdal
At the end of the day, there should be no judgment or body shaming on anyone.
At the end of the day, on the day of judgment day when everybody be judged, you're going to get your fair share.
The transfiguration of Jesus is one of the typical facts of the resurrection of the body; not only of the glorious change, but of the renewed life of the body and of the general judgment day.
I had people body-shaming me when I gained a lot of weight and as a teenager, your body is going to change. To get through it, you need to have great family and friends.
I don't agree with body shaming.
In a living society every day is a day of judgment; and its recognition as such is not the end of all things but the beginning ofa real civilization.
The other day I was thinking - because I get a lot of headaches - I was wondering whether the head should be where it is. Because, at the end of the day, it's probably the heaviest part of your body, right? And yet it's at the top as opposed to, I don't, dangling at the bottom somewhere.
I think sometimes people say a comment and don't realise they're body shaming. I don't think people are body-shamers, maybe just body-judgers. People will say throw-away comments.
Everyone has to realize that body-shaming can happen at any size.
People who give off about fat-shaming and body-shaming are often the same people who talk about Trump's hair or how fat he is, or how old he is. The size of his hands and his fingers - that's the big one: let's all have a big laugh at his hands.
I have sort of a Zen body philosophy, I'm sort of like: we're one weight one day, we're one weight another day, and some day our body just doesn't even exist at all! It's just a vessel I've been given to move through this life. I think about my body as a tool to do the stuff I need to do, but not the be all and end all of my existence. Which sounds like I spent a week at a meditation retreat, but it's genuinely how I feel.
I'm proud of Congress as a body. At the end of the day, we're the people's house, and we should be very mindful that we represent the people.
I didn't want to submit to the army and then, on the day of judgment, have God say to me, 'Why did you do that?' This life is a trial, and you realize that what you do is going to be written down for Judgment Day.
Comedy now is all about body shaming and delivering vulgar dialogues. There can't be another Manorama.
How long can you bank on your body and your face to help you get roles in films? At the end of the day, anyone who wants to be known as an actor wants to be appreciated for his/her work.
On my show 'The Real,' we often encourage women to fight against body-shaming and own the skin that they're in.
Gene Roddenberry's thing always was, we should not pass judgment on anything that anyone else believes in or what they do in their lives.
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