A Quote by Oliver Luck

I spent most of my adult life trying to get as far away from my folks as possible. — © Oliver Luck
I spent most of my adult life trying to get as far away from my folks as possible.
A man who has spent most of his adult life trying out a series of patent medicines is always an optimist.
Between planning family vacations and running away for novel-writing retreats, I've spent much of my adult life questing for the perfect beach escape, renting cottages all along the Florida Gulf and up and down the Atlantic Coast - as far north as Nags Head, as far south as Key West.
I spent most of my adult life as someone's mother and the rest of my life trying to make sure that children are safe. So this to me is - we wrote Hell Is For Children in 1979.
I spent close to a decade as an undercover officer in the CIA and have spent most of my adult life collecting intelligence and protecting sources and methods.
I've spent my entire adult life involved in the community trying to help people live decent lives, working for a strong and secure state of Israel, and making sure that the most vulnerable in our society receive the care that they need.
I spent 20 years of my life building up Queen, and now I'm spending years of my life trying to get away from it.
I spent 20 years of my life building up Queen, and now Im spending years of my life trying to get away from it.
Like so many kids, I just wanted to fit in, and I see now that I spent most of my life trying to be what I wasn't, trying to get people to like me.
I spent most of my adult life looking for romantic love.
I spent most of my adult life essentially agnostic or an atheist.
I have spent far too many years trying to make everybody like me. It's not possible. People can say or think what they want.
As I said, I spent most of my adult life thinking I didn't have a vote, and therefore that what I thought didn't matter.
I have spent my entire adult life trying to make Liberty University the world-class Christian university that was envisioned at its founding.
I spent my adult life as a scientist, and science is, essentially, the most successful approach we have to try and understand the vast mysteries around.
I have spent my adult life trying to figure out why parents and society put themselves into a race -- what's the hurry? I keep trying to convey the pleasure every parent and teacher could feel while observing, appreciating and enjoying what the infant is doing. This attitude would change our educational climate from worry to joy.
At school, I decided I wanted to be a director and then I went out and spent the rest of my adult life trying to be a director. It was really clear to me. So in that sense I was very lucky.
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