Top 1200 Life After High School Quotes & Sayings - Page 3

Explore popular Life After High School quotes.
Last updated on April 20, 2025.
I grew up a little north of New York City and went to high school at Regis, an all-boys tuition-free high school in Manhattan.
I really wasn't heavy in high school. But no one feels right in their own skin, particularly in high school.
I went to high school with some wonderful people, but my entire high school experience was just waiting to leave. — © Dana Gould
I went to high school with some wonderful people, but my entire high school experience was just waiting to leave.
I only went a year to high school. I should have been in high school, but I was in a band, and when you're successful doing that - well, you aren't too likely to go back.
I didn't read much in high school, maybe because I didn't go to high school. Instead, I worked.
I went to art high school and thought I'd be a painter. Unfortunately I didn't finish high school, but that's always been part of my work.
I remember looking at books when I was in high school, but I don't think I really stood in front of a genuine painting or sculpture until I was out of high school.
I want us to develop a way to where kids in high school and the trades can get an associate degree while they're in high school.
I started in high school and then I went onto professional training after that.
I grew up in Denver, Colorado. After high school I went to Vegas
I was in high school, and I was the guy that always got cast in the school play. Theater is huge in high school in Minnesota, and I knew that I was very good at that, and gifted, and I was 'the guy,' but it still wasn't something I ever thought of as 'a job' or something that one could do professionally.
If you could draw a picture of the best high school in the world - where all the teachers are wonderful and all the classrooms are beautiful, it would be my high school.
When you are a high school girl, there is nothing more miraculous than a high school boy. — © Curtis Sittenfeld
When you are a high school girl, there is nothing more miraculous than a high school boy.
I was obsessed with being popular in high school and never achieved it. There's photos from our high school musicals, and I'm comically in the deep background, wearing a beggar's costume.
I made the decision to take acting seriously after high school.
High school is just horrible in general. So, I think it was a good time for me to have stopped acting. I got to be normal in high school.
I was taught to play that way when I was in high school and even before I got to high school.
I grew up in Denver, Colorado. After high school I went to Vegas.
I went away to this summer program after my junior year of high school. They used to have this thing called the Governor's School, and they had it for different disciplines - science, math, performing arts. I auditioned and I got accepted, and it was an eight-week program away from home. I went for acting. I was 15, and I turned 16 while I was there, so that was a seminal moment for me. It made me realize the life of it, the discipline of it, and the joy of that discipline, where it was all we did.
And yet 50 percent of the kids who start high school in the United States today do not finish high school.
In high school, my principal was a priest and my assistant basketball coach. We were close. In high school, I would talk to him a little bit.
I have very young looks, so it's easy for me to play high school, but I'm trying to stay away from high-school movies. As I get older, I'll try and broaden my talents.
A Christian high school is just like any other high school in the sense of the politics and all of these levels of who's cool and what to wear.
I was in high school, trying to get out of high school. The only thing slowing me up was grades.
I moved to Mumbai to pursue my degree after high school.
For example, I noticed that every single kid in the high school in 'The Death-Ray' is based on somebody I went to high school with.
I thought my high school would either be like 'Beverly Hills 90210' or 'Stand and Deliver' - it was just a run-of-the-mill high school.
I didn't really have the entire high school experience. I've been working since I was six years old, so I didn't go to the classic high school.
High school was interesting. For a lot of people, high school was just a big social experiment, and I think the value of high school was not so much learning how to be a great student... but I think it's learning how to interact with people and be social. I would say that in that endeavor, I completely failed.
My sophomore year at high school, I spent $300 I had earned working at After School Matters for my first studio session. For a 16-year-old to sacrifice that much money was pivotal. It spoke a lot about how serious I was.
I was, throughout school, in the theater program. Through elementary school, junior high, high school, and then J.J. Abrams, my closest friend in the world, we were living together. He was writing, and I was trying writing; I wasnt getting paid for it like he was, but I always had the acting bug.
In my freshman year in high school, I went to the only public high school in Boston with a theatre program.
Shigure Sohma: singing High school girls high school girls all for me High school girls
I grew up here in St. Albert, which is a city just north of Edmonton, and I went to Grade 10 here at Paul Kane High School. But then I went to junior in the WHL, Western Hockey League, at age 16. So I left and went to finish school at Norkam High School in Kamloops for grades 11 and 12.
The characters are that vague TV high school age, but they'll be in high school as long as we need them to be.
I kind of had that Parma, Ohio, mentality that after high school, you go to college. Then after college, you get a job; then you get a family. And after that, you just stick around Parma.
I went to middle school and high school, and my drama teacher, Ms. Cooper, basically nurtured me. It was always a part of my life, and my parents allowed it to be.
I survived in high school by working at Kentucky Fried Chicken and made my way up to assistant manager. I was surviving high school and college with that job. — © Norbert Leo Butz
I survived in high school by working at Kentucky Fried Chicken and made my way up to assistant manager. I was surviving high school and college with that job.
I don't really think I got the full high school experience, only because when I got to high school for the first year, it was grades 9-10. We didn't have older grades. But besides that, it was normal. It was a regular public school. We didn't have much going on. It wasn't too crazy.
LaGuardia High School is a place of acceptance. You have every type of kid there, performing. The outcast girl would not have been made fun of in my high school.
I definitely pride myself on suffering through a real high school. A lot of my friends are homeschooled, and I love them for it, but I really wanted that high school experience.
After high school, I earned a scholarship to play Division I soccer at a small school in North Carolina, but I didn't get much playing time, which forced me to determine who I was beyond the field, something I had previously never had to do.
In 1968 when I was in high school I built a four-foot-tall remote control robot with pneumatic cylinders that operated his hands. My robot won first place at a science competition at the University of Alabama where my high school was the only African-American school represented. That was a huge moral victory.
I didn't cheer in high school. I was the farthest thing from a cheerleader in high school. We made fun of cheerleaders. Everybody did!
And while there are exceptions, a lot of plays done at the high school level are boring. At least, that's what I remember when I was in high school.
Around middle school I studied jazz guitar and ended up playing in a jazz band for a bit. But, after high school, I haven't even touched a guitar.
I was a theater dork in high school and did all the plays. My theater teacher in high school, Janet Spahr, was absolutely incredible and mentored me throughout school. She taught me a lot about relying on my instincts.
Thirty days after high-school graduation, I went straight into the Marines. — © Nate Dogg
Thirty days after high-school graduation, I went straight into the Marines.
I've always loved films, and I always felt like a storyteller. I left Norway after high school and moved to Manhattan and went to film school in Manhattan. That's when I really found out that this was my calling and what I wanted to do.
I did the marching band all throughout junior high and high school. Music was one of my favorite things in school.
I was that kid who did every activity when I was in high school. There wasn't a day that I didn't stay after school to do something. I just had my hands in everything. And I was similarly very, very angry. I was an angry little guy.
I had a lot of insecure moments in high school. It wasn't all peachy keen. But, I don't necessarily think that I hated high school and wanted to crawl into a hole either.
But, that was the beginning, though I didn't start writing until I was in high school and when I was in high school I really began to write poetry with great energy and enthusiasm.
I went to film school at Columbia and did that for a couple years and really thought I was going to be a filmmaker, and then I kind of drifted over to the acting side after that. I'd been an actor in high school, and when I got to college, it was all about film.
I went to school for singing, middle school at LaGuardia High School. Followed by Berkeley College of Music and afterwards I went to acting school at the Neighborhood Playhouse for Theater.
For people who aren't familiar with my background, I didn't graduate high school. My career high salary was about $200,000. My last position was about $122,000. For a guy without a high school diploma, that's pretty good.
In high school, I was not as much of a grade-follower. I kind of enjoyed more of the social aspect of high school.
No one in high school wants to be put under the spotlight. You don't want to be that person who stands up for the other people because then the people who are going after those people are gonna come after you.
My sister is an artist and an interior designer. She went to high school for art. I went to high school for music.
I went out to visit Dorsey Burnette, after I graduated high school.
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