A Quote by Uriah Hall

Losing sucks but I look at more what I gained as an individual, as an athlete..sometimes in losing you learn a lot. — © Uriah Hall
Losing sucks but I look at more what I gained as an individual, as an athlete..sometimes in losing you learn a lot.
Losing sucks. Nobody wants to be known for losing; you can't even have fun when you're losing.
Sometimes you learn more from losing than winning. Losing forces you to reexamine.
You can't play sports without losing sometimes and, in losing, you learn something about grace and how to act under pressure.
Losing my parents really set me adrift in more ways than one. It's not just losing them. It's losing the possibility of family.
There comes that phase in life when, tired of losing, you decide to stop losing, then continue losing. Then you decide to really stop losing, and continue losing. The losing goes on and on so long you begin to watch with curiosity, wondering how low you can go.
Losing sucks. I don't care how much money you make or what stats you put up. If you're competitive enough to make it to the NBA, losing is absolutely brutal.
Whoever said "It's not whether you win or lose but how you play the game" is full of it! Winning makes all the difference in the world. Winning is fun. Losing is not. Losing sucks.
Sometimes losing a pet is more painful than losing a human because in the case of the pet, you were not pretending to love it.
Both fighters can't win in this sport, so you have to leave it in God's hands. Losing is not the end of the world. Losing is natural; the better-prepared athlete will win.
Losing ... really does say something about who you are. Among other things it measures are: do you blame others, or do you own the loss? Do you analyze your failure, or just complain about bad luck? If you're willing to examine failure, and to look not just at your outward physical performance, but your internal workings, too, losing can be valuable. How you behave in those moments can perhaps be more self-defining than winning could ever be. Sometimes losing shows you for who you really are.
These communities that are losing local news coverage are losing something deeper. They're losing a connection to American democracy. And those connections must be rebuilt. We need more of a bottom-up sense of what it means to produce news.
Sometimes it feels like you're losing, but even when you're losing, you're getting something.
What I worry about is that people are losing confidence, losing energy, losing enthusiasm, and there's a real opportunity to get them into work.
Losing a son, losing a daughter, a brother, a sister, losing a close friend - it can go beyond grief to isolation and feeling despair.
We're constantly losing - we're losing time, we're losing ourselves. I don't feel for the things I lost.
People who are homeless, they're not all addicts. A lot of times, they're just people who, through something like losing their job or losing someone in their life, ended up on the streets. So much of our time is spent in cars that sometimes you need to look out of those windows. And you see that a dollar, 50 cents, whatever you have, may not mean much to you, but it means everything to people who are hungry and who are in need.
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