Top 1200 Both My Parents Quotes & Sayings - Page 5

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Last updated on December 19, 2024.
I feel like kids are the perfect psychic investigators of their parents, and kids understand their parents' unconscious better than the parents ever do.
It was a natural path for me, being an artist. Both my parents were artists. I was surrounded by it and I instinctively was drawn toward it, and received a lot of encouragement.
Both of my mom's parents were music teachers, so I was hearing the fundamentals of playing the piano, what notes are, and all those things very early on. — © Jillian Hervey
Both of my mom's parents were music teachers, so I was hearing the fundamentals of playing the piano, what notes are, and all those things very early on.
I'm Cuban. Both my parents are Cuban. My grandparents are, too. Although I have no idea where Fit comes from.
Both my parents had never been to New York, so when they got to go out with me for 'Good Morning America,' they were so happy.
My parents were both actors; my dad sort of quite early on. My mother acted for a while, and now she's a painter.
I'm a trained martial artist. My parents were both martial artists.
Both my parents said they never got so many emails from friends and colleagues - with all the theater work that I've done - than when I was on 'The Good Wife.'
Being parents suits us. Having kids has been the best thing for both of us.
I have great parents, and they both taught me great things, but my formative years were boundaryless.
I try to keep a balance. I actually believe that children want normal parents, they don't want celebrities or important parents or anything different from all the other parents.
My parents are both intellectuals and readers; my mother would take me to the library every few days from before I was one year old.
My parents are both war veterans; they met in Vietnam. They were involved in a war that they absolutely disagreed with. — © Matt Skiba
My parents are both war veterans; they met in Vietnam. They were involved in a war that they absolutely disagreed with.
Turning 30 was when my parents both got cancer and were fighting it and beat it, but their mortality started to get to me. Everything wasn't as hunky-dory like it was.
I come from a police family. Both my parents are police officers.
Both of my parents would say they were atheists, so where I inherited my connection to God I don't know. But it's natural. No Bible, no Torah, just the love religion.
Both my parents are Catholic and staunch believers. I'm not a Catholic now, but I still carry part of it with me.
The mentality that I have now comes from my parents, both of whom were judo fighters and they were very competitive.
I was real into theater, and then I tried soccer, acting and ballet. Both my parents didn't want a child-star model, so I didn't get into modeling until I was 14.
Both parents were teachers. My father became an assistant principal, and he was responsible for discipline at the school. So I didn't get away with much at home.
My childhood was very colourful, and I am very good friends with both my parents. We have no secrets.
We see systematically taught in our high schools today that kids not have to hear their parents, that they can make their own rules, and not even live by what their parents, so there's no guidance from the parents. And there's a concerted effort why - government must be their God.
My parents were both union members, and I grew up hearing how important it was to empower workers and have fair labor practices.
My parents have been my biggest influencers. They both immigrated to America and taught me that I can do anything I dream of with hard work and determination.
We were both very much the same. We were both very impulsive. We both loved life. We both loved shopping. We both had a love of clothes, obviously, because he was the designer that I kind of wore forever and ever.
Irreverence ran on both sides of our family...my parents brought me up to think we could all change the world.
My parents were both lawyers and were very active in social causes when I was young.
Both of my parents are music teachers. My mother owns the school that I taught in. My brothers and sisters are musicans. My mom pushed me all the time. She knew that I could do it. She knew more than I did. She thought I would go somewhere. She gave me the job and helped me get equipment, which a lot of parents don't do. Alot of my students had to go out and fight for it.
My parents both worked full time. I remember a lot of simple meals. Everything I know about cooking is self-schooled.
I grew up believing in meritocracy and the American dream. My parents came here from India. They had no connections. My brother and I went to public schools, and both of us succeeded.
Writing was something I have always been interested in. I've grown up in a household full of books, with both my parents English teachers and very booky.
My grandmother really inspires me. I lived with her until halfway through middle school, since both my parents worked a lot.
I was very lucky, my parents were very encouraging, and both my grandmothers. They had exquisite taste.
Rich parents are famous both for miserliness and astonishing longevity. And, when they finally do die, you'll find they've left their estate in inviolate trust to the golden retrievers.
Everyone in my family is an artist. Both my parents are painters and my mom's an opera singer. I was never shown any other way to process life.
Through school, I saw plenty of theatre my parents weren't necessarily up on. They would prefer a football game to watching 'The Nutcracker,' and that's fine. I enjoy both.
If you are conscious and really want change in this world, and you don't vote, then what was all the fighting for? All the things our parents and our parents' parents fought for?
I'm very privileged to have great parents, caring parents, parents that dedicate a lot of their time and energy to their children, and we're very thankful for that. — © P.K. Subban
I'm very privileged to have great parents, caring parents, parents that dedicate a lot of their time and energy to their children, and we're very thankful for that.
We both came from families in which parents got married, had children and the whole thing. So we were not the kind of people to live together permanently.
Individual children are separated from their parents only when those parents cross the border illegally and are arrested. We can't have children with parents who are in incarceration.
If you did something, and it wasn't right, you definitely found out about it. And they were pretty smart people, both my parents, so you didn't get too much by them.
Let's ask their parents. And will those children point to their parents and tell us you really need to enforce the law against my parents? Because they know what they were doing when they caused me to break the law. I don't think we've thought through this very well. But there's a reason why in the president's DACA programs he didn't grant his unconstitutional executive amnesty to the parents of dreamers.
Let's face it, staying at home has its appeal. The modern family set-up with both parents working is fraught with challenges most of us will have experienced.
I don't know. Both my parents are dead. So? Wait, I got pictures of their corpses in my wallet. I had them blown up as murals. Here.
Both my parents have done considerable work in theatre and I have grown up with that culture, but I still felt that I needed formal training.
In far too many families with young children, both parents are working, when, if they really took an honest look at the budget, they might find they don't both need to. ... What happened in America so that mothers and fathers who leave their children in the care of someone else - or worse yet, home alone after school between three and six in the afternoon - find themselves more affirmed by society? Here, we can thank the influence of radical feminism.
My parents are from Scotland and my sister and brother were both born in Scotland so my heritage is from there.
Both my parents are very emotional. My mom is not expressive, my father is more, and he speaks out more. — © Sooraj Pancholi
Both my parents are very emotional. My mom is not expressive, my father is more, and he speaks out more.
Except for poverty, incompatibility, opposition of parents, absence of love on one side and of desire to marry on both, nothing stands in the way of our happy union.
As my parents taught me, by both words and deeds, a life of public services is as much a gift to the person who serves as it is to those he's serving.
When my parents met, my mother was a waitress and my father was a dockyard worker. They were part of that post-war better-yourself generation, so they both went to night school.
When my parents died they both were 47, and they died of complications of different diseases; one being diabetes.
Sometimes I laugh with my parents, and sometimes I yell at them, and both are therapeutic.
The example my parents set, both in and outside of our household, helped me understand that we all have a specific purpose in life--to give back to society.
My sister and I both benefited hugely from the great security that our parents had given us, and then we went off and squandered it all rushing around in showbiz.
My parents were both actors my dad sort of quite early on. My mother acted for a while, and now she's a painter.
Both of my parents are professors and everyone in my family has some fabulous degree of something or another and I couldn't get into college because I didn't know a language.
My parents themselves both went to university, and they very much expected me to be an intellectual and go through further education, and it's to kind of their surprise that I became an athlete.
Both my parents are well educated; my father worked for the CBI before becoming a businessman, and my mother was a civil surgeon. But I did not want to be a doctor.
My parents are both massive feminists and always led me to believe that I could dream big and do anything that I wanted in my life, almost to a delusional degree.
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