Top 1200 Judging Myself Quotes & Sayings - Page 20

Explore popular Judging Myself quotes.
Last updated on November 15, 2024.
I talk to myself everyone once in a while. Give myself very good advice. Sometimes I even take it.
I don't sit around and read papers about myself. If I see myself on TV, if I don't like it, I change the channel.
A guy like myself wants to make a play and be the difference, but the thing is I have to keep saying to myself to just do what I can. — © Daunte Culpepper
A guy like myself wants to make a play and be the difference, but the thing is I have to keep saying to myself to just do what I can.
Perhaps we should worry less about judging people for being Mormon or Baptist or Muslim or gay or straight or black or white or Latino or by their religious or political brands and worry more about electing thoughtful, serious and ethical politicians on both sides of the political isle who are willing to work together for progress.
I lock my door upon myself, And bar them out; but who shall wall Self from myself, most loathed of all?
At the end of the day, I represent myself first and foremost, and I'm not going to ever purposely try and misrepresent myself.
I don't view myself as a victim of gun violence. I view myself as a victim of a maniac who happened to use a gun as a tool, and I view myself as a victim of the legislators at the time who left me defenseless.
I'm going to focus on myself and continue to get myself better because I have plenty of things I need to work on.
When I look at a script, I basically ask myself, 'Do I believe the relationships? Are they people like you and me?' I have to be able to see myself in it.
I never want to restrict myself and say I'm at my ultimate peak, I'm always looking to take myself to a higher level.
I've never enjoyed myself. I'm incapable of enjoying myself. There's just some people who don't enjoy themselves very much.
I spent a lot of time teaching myself theory and harmony so I could be free to express myself on the instrument.
So what if nobody came? I’ll have all the ice cream and tea, And I’ll laugh with myself, And I’ll dance with myself, And I’ll sing, “Happy Birthday to me!
I'm not really interested in myself in my writing. I can't see myself in the songs, even though I know different parts of me are there. — © Johnny Flynn
I'm not really interested in myself in my writing. I can't see myself in the songs, even though I know different parts of me are there.
And if I let myself down, appear on stage when I'm not looking my best, it's not fun for me. I just beat myself up about it.
When I got into the league, guys didn't expect me to be as quick and fast as I was. I think it was myself holding myself back.
So far, the thing I seem to have been rewarded for in film is leaving myself behind and transforming myself into other people.
There are cases when I can make myself better off by restricting my future choices and commit myself to a specific course of action.
I put a lot of pressure on myself, I can't say today is a bad day, I can't do that to myself. Whatever it takes, I have to deliver a scene.
Whenever I have faced a setback I have dusted myself down and got on with the rest of my life because I believed in myself.
I don't consider myself a heartthrob in any way. I'm just pinching myself. I'm truly fortunate to be a part of this whole process.
I've learned to love my body and myself over time by being a little more accepting and having grace with myself.
As an artist myself I don't like to be preached. I want to enjoy myself, so I kind of use that perspective to make music.
I do have that personality where I like to have fun and enjoy life, so I have to make sure I tone myself down when I'm expressing myself.
Society loves to put bubbles up there and pop them, and I resent it. I'd rather expose myself myself.
I just know that I don't want cheating. I refuse. I deepened myself but I don't believe in myself because my thought is invented.
I've always used poetry to explain myself to myself. These things just sat in my psyche and then came out.
I always feel kind of awkward when I look at pictures of myself. Watching videos of myself is really uncomfortable.
I consider myself an artist. God granted me some gifts so that I could express myself artistically.
I try to keep myself as sane and as grounded as possible by surrounding myself with normal people, such as all the friends that I've had from when I was little.
I thought I was going to school to be other people, but really, what I learned was to be myself - accepting myself, my strengths and weaknesses.
It is important to feel the anger without judging it, without attempting to find meaning in it. It may take many forms: anger at the health-care system, at life, at your loved one for leaving. Life is unfair. Death is unfair. Anger is a natural reaction to the unfairness of loss.
The older I've got, the easier I've found it to accept myself. I think I've finally learnt not to beat myself up so much.
I used to be pretty hard on myself, like, if I didn't like a haircut I did on someone, I would think about it a lot and second-guess myself. But after therapy and a lot of work, I know how to dust myself off a lot faster, and those things don't knock me down as much as they used to.
People are, by and large, quite poor at judging correct absolute values but are astute about determining relative values. Psychologists call this coherent arbitrariness, which suggests that individuals are coherent when they compare prices on a relative basis but arbitrary when those prices are considered versus fundamental value.
I'm direct, I'm unpretentious and I'm pretty dogged, and I hope I've got a capacity to laugh at myself and not take myself too seriously.
It's how I express myself - through storytelling and characters. They often reveal very intimate, vulnerable sides of myself.
In leaving Hollywood and coming to New York, I feel I can be more myself. After all, if I can't be myself, what's the good of being anything at all? — © Marilyn Monroe
In leaving Hollywood and coming to New York, I feel I can be more myself. After all, if I can't be myself, what's the good of being anything at all?
Often a cold shudder has run through me, and I have asked myself whether I may have not devoted myself to a fantasy.
At any given time somebody has to make a play, and if it's not myself, you have other players that are paid and professionals like myself.
I still pinch myself when I see myself on 'Match of the Day' - it's at times like that you realise how far you've come.
I grew up as an only child, so I like being by myself. So I train predominantly - 98 percent of the time - by myself.
I am now willing to forgive myself . . . for believing I could offer something to others before I have offered it to myself.
I'm keeping myself to myself. And I like it that way. I'm not hunting. I'm the opposite of a - what would a male cougar be? Is there such a thing? Whatever it is, I'm not that.
To grow in craft is to increase the bredth of what I can do, but art is the depth, the passion, the desire, the courage to be myself and myself alone.
I don't consider myself a skilled enough instrumentalist to be able to create the atmosphere that I want with just my guitar by myself.
I make some movies for myself. I do that sometimes when the subject matter is very sensitive and very personal and I really can't imagine that I'm an audience member. I would lose myself too much if I thought of myself as the audience. There are other types of genre films that I need to be able to direct from the audience, to be right next to you watching the picture being made.
There are three words I like to repeat to myself: glass half full. Just to remind myself to be grateful for everything I have.
I never imagined myself as an actor who would be in films. I always only thought of myself being in a play or a musical. — © Jennifer Lawrence
I never imagined myself as an actor who would be in films. I always only thought of myself being in a play or a musical.
In the journal I do not just express myself more openly than I could to any person; I create myself.
I don't necessarily see myself or consider myself an activist, but I feel like I have a platform, and I'm going to utilize it to the best of my ability.
I really preferred the characters I could totally create by myself, because I always think of myself as an actor first.
Ever since I can remember I’ve had positive and negative fan reviews. And whether it was positive or negative it wasn’t always based in reality or what my perception of the music was. But judging from playing these new songs live and my feelings on the record [Scream] – and it’s a great record – there is definitely an audience for it. Also, I don’t really go to clubs so I don’t know what sounds are made there.
I'm not an ad-libber. If I'm asked to ad-lib, I can ad-lib forever and it's really fun to do that, but I find that well-written scripts are put together very carefully. Once you start to ad-lib and add words to sentences, there's a slacking that happens. When it's good writing, it's taut. I'm not judging people who do ad-lib.
I want to accomplish something for myself and set a bar for myself, for somebody to be like, 'Damn, Trippie legendary. He did such and such.'
I don't consider myself a star or a celebrity or anybody, you know. I just think of myself as doing something that I love to do.
If I call myself an actor, it sounds like I'm trying to pass myself off as someone who went to drama school.
Why do you think I write these feminist songs, to try and teach myself to respect myself. You know, it's not because I'm a hero.
I think everyone knows that I keep myself to myself and I don't get involved in trash talk or anything else.
I would do a sort of violence to myself if I didn't express myself in the directly creative ways of writing, both words and music.
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