A Quote by Shabana Azmi

I look back on my career with some sort of satisfaction. — © Shabana Azmi
I look back on my career with some sort of satisfaction.
It's something to be proud about when I'm done, to look back at my career and know I've handled myself the way I wanted to - that my son can look back at my career and be proud of his dad.
I've sort of done a play every four or five years I guess if I look back in my career. And I think that's good.
The most important decision I ever made in my career was to live my life in sports as honestly and ethically as possible. Never having compromised my values allows me to look back on my life with no regrets and feel satisfaction in what I was able to accomplish.
I feel like everything does happen for a reason, and I can totally look back on my career and the decisions I've made and how it sort of worked itself out.
There are some fabulous treasures of photos of me during the early days of my career; there are these pin-up photos that make me laugh: I look like the poor man's Maria Montez. But there are some I look at, and I didn't realize how sexy I looked back then.
To look back and reflect on the career and sort of look at the seasons of it before I got to the WWF, working the territories and Japan and Texas, Puerto Rico, and then the WWF and WCW, then obviously the TNA years - it's been quite a journey, I'll say that.
I think, in anyone's career, you have to map out some sort of strategy of steps that take you closer to the career you want.
One tends to look back at the mistakes as the same thing - relinquishing control of something at some point in your career.
When I'm done fighting, I want to look to get some sort of driving career somewhere. My goal is to eventually get into the Mint 400 and do the trophy truck stuff.
For me, Art is the restoration of order. It may discuss all sort of terrible things, but there must be satisfaction at the end. A little bit of hunger, but also satisfaction.
To be able to look back upon ones life in satisfaction, is to live twice.
I don't want to look back on my career at some point and say, 'What a pity, I came close a few times, but it was never good enough.'
Unless each day can be looked back upon by an individual as one in which he has had some fun, some joy, some real satisfaction, that day is a loss.
When I look back over my career, having an opportunity to compete against really good players like Lester Hayes are some of the highlights.
To be able to look back upon one's past life with satisfaction is to live twice.
So as the years draw on toward the Biblical limit, the inclination to look back, and to tell some sort of story of what one has seen, grows upon most of us.
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