A Quote by Jamal Murray

Just wanting to play, I think that's my biggest attribute, just wanting to play through whatever I have to in order to go out and compete. — © Jamal Murray
Just wanting to play, I think that's my biggest attribute, just wanting to play through whatever I have to in order to go out and compete.
I was a little too antsy, I was jumping around, wanting to go here, wanting to be there. Once I started smoking weed, I just wanted to stay and play the video game and rap. You spend good time with your daughter, man, after you go smoke, chill with your daughter. You're willing to do whatever she want to do.
My older brother, he did everything. He played baseball, he played basketball. Just being able to watch him as a youngster, wanting to be like him, wanting to play on the team with him and watching those older guys in my neighborhood play sports.
The aesthetic came along the way, I think - just through experimenting, and going on tour, and trying stuff out on stage, having fun with it, and not taking it too seriously. If I had a ballgown at home, I'd wear it onstage. If I found something in a charity shop, I'd wear it. That's where it grew from - just wanting to play dress-up.
I think that anytime that you can open your eyes and see all that you have and all that you've been blessed with, it's the greatest way to connect you with God, just being grateful rather than always wanting more, wanting to be different, wanting to be better.
I didn't grow up wanting to play basketball. I grew up wanting to enlist and then go into law enforcement.
I came up in battling and just wanting to compete. Even if you had no real problem with someone, you just wanted to compete.
That's the competitive nature in me. Just wanting to be the best and wanting to do everything I have to in order for this team to make it that far. You put pressure on your shoulders.
I go into every film not just wanting to play the hot girl in the movie. It kills me.
I just see the ball and I go for it. It's wanting to make a winning play for the team and get a rebound.
Every time I see a good play or watch a good movie, I have the same feeling I had as a child of wanting to be that person on stage or wanting to run through the forest with a big dress on.
I think that's all a form of wanting to let go, of wanting to get out... It's not something easily described or understood.
We want to win every game of football we go into. I don't know how we would go into a game not wanting to win and not wanting to play well.
Just the desire to play a mom, wanting to play someone actually closer to who I am and where I am in my life. People are used to seeing me play the single, hot girl, which has been fun, but at the same time, this role is more akin to my natural proclivities.
I don't know that I ever wanted greatness, on its own. It seems rather like wanting to be an engineer, rather than wanting to design something--or wanting to be a writer, rather than wanting to write. It should be a by-product, not a thing in itself. Otherwise, it's just an ego trip.
People think I play hard. It's just me wanting to be in the NBA and trying to prove every game that I should be here.
From my experience working with comedians, there is that competitive aspect. With actors, for instance, they don't want to look competitive even if they are, whereas comedians, I think, are openly happy to play on the idea that they all compete with each other to get the laughs. There's something about comedy, I think, that encourages that. There's this kind of schoolboy sense of wanting to top the other person that we play off of to show them competing for who's smarter or cleverer.
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