Top 1200 Knowing Myself Quotes & Sayings - Page 18

Explore popular Knowing Myself quotes.
Last updated on April 21, 2025.
I do not think of myself as a standard bearer for Asian players. I just try to work hard for myself.
For me, Instagram had become a place where I could image myself the way I found myself.
I overcame myself, the sufferer; I carried my own ashes to the mountains; I invented a brighter flame for myself. — © Friedrich Nietzsche
I overcame myself, the sufferer; I carried my own ashes to the mountains; I invented a brighter flame for myself.
I tried to stop smoking cigarettes by telling myself I just didn't want to smoke, but I didn't believe myself
I've always been hard on myself, so I expect so much out of myself that that pressure can be inspiring at time.
I've never been satisfied with myself, ever. But I feel good about myself, because I'm truthful. I don't corrupt myself. I'm also a perfectionist. I'm very impatient. I've got energy and drive and I can't stand inefficiency in people. And I can't stand dumb people. Why surround yourself with people who are going to tie you down? I don't suffer fools.
I always pushed myself. Whenever I felt I needed to stop, I made myself run faster.
The will to challenge myself is strong, but I think that's growing, the desire to stretch myself and make it hard.
I don't want to take photographs that I won't recognize as myself, and myself isn't necessarily just blankly staring at the lens.
I have to ask myself, Am I content with calling myself a feminist? Yes, because I speak out.
I have the ability to build myself up or break myself down. I stay positive. Strength comes from within.
I have to stop myself sometimes and look at where my life is and pat myself on the back because I'm beating the odds.
If I didn't define myself for myself, I would be crunched into other people's fantasies for me and eaten alive. — © Audre Lorde
If I didn't define myself for myself, I would be crunched into other people's fantasies for me and eaten alive.
I don't want to take myself too seriously. That's my lesson to myself.
I believe in myself. There's nothing wrong with believing in myself. That's the whole idea, is that you can always become better.
I educate myself, but I haven't got the time or patience to enlist myself in a degree course. The world is my school.
I'm trying to create a relationship with myself. I feel good being married to myself right now!
I thought instead of burying myself under dirt, I'd bury myself under water so everybody could see that you're there.
I've always viewed myself as an achiever. I need to achieve for myself.
I hid myself within myself ... and quietly wrote down all my joys, sorrows and contempt in my diary.
I was looking for myself and asking everyone except myself questions which I, and only I, could answer.
I don't think of myself as an American; I see myself as a human being.
For me, acting is about getting away from myself. So to look at myself is the last thing I want.
I definitely have a tendency to only see the blemishes of things, and see lots of things about my acting that I don't like. I think I've gotten a little easier on myself, or at least a little more usefully critical of myself. I think before, I just couldn't take looking at myself at all.
'Konnichiwa' was made because I don't like the industry. I really had to remove myself from it to understand myself.
I change the world by changing myself. I am changing the world by loving myself, by enjoying life, by making my personal world a dream of heaven. I change myself, and just like magic, other people start to change.
I wake up in the morning and ask myself; is life worth living? Should I blast myself?
I talk to myself quite a lot, and when things get stressful, I just tell myself to breathe.
The longer I have played, the perception of myself has changed. I conduct myself to other players a bit better.
I'm always shocked when I see myself because I don't recognize myself.
I'm very ambitious, but I also love myself - which means I try to take care of myself.
I would classify myself as an individual. That's what I try to stay true with - being myself, 100 percent.
I never Google myself. Only if I want to feel really terrible about myself would I do that.
If, and when, I do eventually decide to retire, the announcement will be made by myself. I feel that I have earned the right to do it myself.
On a few words of what is real in the world I nourish myself. I defend myself against Whatever remains.
Forgiveness is a gift to myself. I forgive, and I set myself free.
As an actress, I have to be objective about myself. If I don't criticize myself, there are plenty who will do a find job of it for me!
I have never been vain. I don't take myself seriously. I don't consider myself sexy or good-looking. — © Ranbir Kapoor
I have never been vain. I don't take myself seriously. I don't consider myself sexy or good-looking.
Even to this day, I rarely read any articles on myself. I won't watch anything on television on myself.
I wrote to explain my own life to myself, stories are the vessels I use to interpret the world to myself.
I try to keep my artistic opinions not so much "to myself" but "on myself."
I lost myself in the bubble of music - driving myself to be a success.
What I've learned from myself is that I don't have to be anybody else. Myself is good enough.
I don't see myself only as a member of the New Orleans community. I see myself as a part of the human community. I see myself as a part of the community that's trying to put things in the world that add value to people's lives.
The pressure to be pretty? I set, you know, boundaries and goals for myself. I try not to compare myself to anyone else because I will never be anyone else except myself. So I try and stay true to me, and hopefully the right projects will come my way.
I didn't react well toward paparazzi. I just was really protective of myself and constantly hiding myself.
If I had to label myself now, I'd call myself a Taoist-Christian-agnostic quantum mechanic.
One of the commitments I made to myself when I decided to write a book was to be brutally honest, particularly about myself. — © Alana Stewart
One of the commitments I made to myself when I decided to write a book was to be brutally honest, particularly about myself.
When I'm down, I talk to myself a lot. I look crazy because I'm constantly having an argument with myself.
I'm constantly evolving. I can just say that I'm attuning myself to contemporary fashion, moulding myself to opportunities.
To be honest, the reason I have my cats is to force myself to think about something other than myself.
I've always prided myself on being myself and trying to stick true to who I am and how I was raised.
I am learning to get online myself, and I will have that down fairly soon, getting on myself.
I spill water on myself all the time at nice restaurants. I've run into poles and knocked myself out.
I don't like myself. I'm not vain at all. I hate looking at myself - I always think I look ugly. Honest.
I was no Cherokee. I was no warrior. I was nobody special. I was just a girl, scared and angry. When I saw myself in Daddy Glen's eyes, I wanted to die. No, I wanted to be already dead, cold and gone. Everything felt hopeless. He looked at me and I was ashamed of myself. It was like sliding down an endless hole, seeing myself at the bottom, dirty, ragged, poor, stupid.
I keep myself to myself pretty much. I'm not someone who gallivants around town looking for attention.
I've tried actively to define myself and redefine myself, and not be pigeonholed.
No matter how beautiful a spot I find myself in, if the food ain't up to much, I won't enjoy myself.
When I'm by myself - composing or writing film scores - it's very lonely. I'm just sitting by myself in the studio.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience. More info...
Got it!