A Quote by Rulon Gardner

My favorite part of Wyoming is as soon as I hit the border. I'm home, where life is good. — © Rulon Gardner
My favorite part of Wyoming is as soon as I hit the border. I'm home, where life is good.
We started out making a film [ The Fourth Phase] about the incredible snow we get at home in Wyoming, the journey soon macroed out into this epic 16,000 mile trip around the North Pacific, taking us to locations in Japan, Alaska, the Kamchatka Peninsula in far-eastern Russia, and back to Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
It's always good to be home and see the parents, and hit up my favorite Chinatown cafes for curry chicken rice.
For those of us living in Texas and other border states, the reality of an open and unsecured border is a part of everyday life.
I've gotten stronger, but I don't ever try to hit home runs. I stay with the same approach, just hit line drives. If you get under one and it goes out, it's a home run, but I don't feel any pressure to hit home runs.
Home is essentially a set of values you carry around with you and, like a turtle or a snail or whatever, home has to be something that is part of you and can be equally a part of you wherever you are. I think that not having a home is a good inducement to creating a metaphysical home and to being able to see it in more invisible ways.
My favorite place in the whole world is Jackson Hole, Wyoming.
I think a couple things, I mean, you know, the tragic death of Matthew Shepard occurred in Wyoming. Colorado and Wyoming are very similar. We have some of the same, you know, backward-thinking in the kind of rural Western areas you see in, you know, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, New Mexico.
Wyoming - God bless you in Wyoming - it's very boring, and it's the most isolated place on Earth.
I don't have a favorite part. My current part is my favorite part. And when I do the next thing, that will be my favorite part.
I don't really set personal goals for home runs or anything like that. However many I hit, I hit. If I'm making consistent contact and hitting the ball hard, then I will hit home runs.
At night in this part of the West the stars, as I had seen them in Wyoming, were as big as Roman Candles and as lonely as the Prince who's lost his ancestral home and journeys across the spaces trying to find it again, and knows he never will.
I adore the fact that when I'm driving home from work, as soon as I hit my neighbourhood, I see people I know.
There's a wide range of motivations that led folks to patrol the border, to be part of Arizona Border Recon.
I offered early on - I think I was governor about a month when I met President Obama - and said, 'I would like to visit with you in reference to border security, in reference to immigration. I'd like to be part of the discussion because I lived on the border all my life.' I've never received a call.
Part of the job for me and others from El Paso who live along the border is to dispel the myths about how supposedly dangerous the border is.
Soon after, I returned home to my family, with a determination to bring them as soon as possible to live in Kentucky, which I esteemed a second paradise, at the risk of my life and fortune.
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