Top 1200 Teenage Years Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Teenage Years quotes.
Last updated on November 16, 2024.
In my late teenage years, I developed a real passion for it, and wrote a lot of poetry.
The teenage years are ridiculously crucial and hard and, um, awkward.
No boy is worth your teenage years!. — © Hayley Williams
No boy is worth your teenage years!.
My dad liked a lot of Motown, but I didn't listen to it until my teenage years.
I didn't have any relationships in my teenage years, as I felt I was not attractive enough.
The teenage years are years of great chaos and confusion in your lives, but also a time of seeking a deeper meaning.
I went the more pop-rock route when I was around my teenage years, actually around 13 years old. I think Avril Lavigne really jump-started that. I heard 'Complicated,' and I fell in love, and I've loved her ever since.
I missed my teenage years. I was never a teenager.
In my teenage years I was as addicted to great pop as I was to free jazz, electronic music, and hardcore blues.
I have teenage boys and I think teenage boys require a father to have eyeballs on them at all times.
I was too crazy in my teenage years and I wasn't doing anything that made any sense.
The teenage years are the years to examine faith - the need to be independent and the need to be anchored. Who made all this? And what do I have to do with it?
You're staring," Lana said. "Yes. I am. I'm a teenage boy. Beautiful girls in wet underwear have a tendency to cause staring in teenage boys. — © Michael  Grant
You're staring," Lana said. "Yes. I am. I'm a teenage boy. Beautiful girls in wet underwear have a tendency to cause staring in teenage boys.
Throughout my teenage years or whatever, I've been so uncomfortable, or I've made mistakes and I've felt like I'm the only one who has done that.
My dad grew up in Nicaragua in his teenage years, then immigrated to the United States.
I think the most important part of the teenage years is wondering.
People - not just in their teenage years - hold on to this fantasy of love when they're not ready to have a real relationship.
I write for teens partially to work out whatever it was that I needed to from my own teenage years.
I am really very fond of Indian classical music though I have spent my teenage years in Bahrain.
I think your teenage years define your musical roots forever. You're always looking for a theme for your high school years.
A lot of my music is about self-discovery because I focus on my teenage years.
A lot of people do that kind of nostalgia stuff believing that they were very happy in their teenage years, but that's probably just an illusion.
I read a lot until was about 12, then as a teenager I was more interested in kissing boys. But I kept a diary for a few years, so words were a big part of my teenage years.
My teenage years were pretty - I have regrets about those years. Obviously everyone knows that as a teenager it's really confusing and your feelings are so raw.
Live your life like you are 80 years old looking back on your teenage years
It's funny: I always, as a high school teacher and particularly as a high school yearbook teacher, because yearbook staffs are 90 percent female, I got to sit in and overhear teenage girl talk for many years. I like teenage girls; I like their drama, their foibles. And I think, 'I'll be good with a teenage daughter!'
Boys do cry, but I don't think I shed a tear for a good chunk of my teenage years.
I'm quite disappointed that I'll never relive my teenage years.
I consider my teenage years as being desperately unhappy.
I've always had a teenage thread running through my music. On my first album, I had a song called 'Confessions of a Teenage Girl.' It's about using your feminine wealth to get what you want.
I went through my awkward teenage years. I don't want to go back.
I really didn't settle stuff spiritually until I was 17 years of age. But through my teenage years I just knew that someday I had to settle accounts and get things straightened up and move in that direction.
Anyone who's followed our band through the years has heard about the teenage angst.
From birth to the teenage years, the brain undergoes a fourfold increase in volume
I spent the majority of my teenage years in hospitals, rehabs and halfway houses.
I spent my teenage years in Paris when my dad was stationed there, and I'd look at women in their forties and think, 'That's the age I want to be.'
All my teenage years my punk was hip-hop - I just hated pop music.
Men fill up their heads and drawers and sheds with stuff from their teenage years. — © Claudia Winkleman
Men fill up their heads and drawers and sheds with stuff from their teenage years.
Sometimes, the hardest foster children to take are teenage boys, which I was one, and I was never adopted or anything, and so I think if people up more for teenage boys, that might be beneficial.
The 1970s, the decade of my teenage years, was a transitional period in American youth culture.
I started my teenage years singing in churches across America, and finally wound up on a big stage.
I never had teenage years. I guess because I was seen to be more adult than anybody around me.
I was on the Internet a lot during my teenage years, and I think the influence of that kind of textuality on my writing has been pretty significant.
I was a teenage girl once. I was not an overweight teenage girl, but I had really bad acne when I was 11 or 12 years old. It was heart-rending, and people made fun of me. People whispered when I walked by in the hallways, and I was sure they were whispering about me. My adult perspective is maybe they weren't.
You're always looking at last year, or 10 years ago, or your school days, or your teenage years, your formative years. Because that's exactly what they are, they're your formative years.
I was an only child for 15 years and then this lovely present, Fred, came along. It was great - it meant I had my teenage years with a little one around.
I've always been a big fan of Stephen King, especially in my teenage years.
As a little girl, I used to write stories, but by my teenage years, I got out of the habit. — © Gail Honeyman
As a little girl, I used to write stories, but by my teenage years, I got out of the habit.
Before 'Veronica Mars,' I was not, and probably am still not, much of a crime reader. My mom left out a copy of 'Helter Skelter' when I was 10, and I secretly read it, and then I spent all my teenage years afraid of hippies. I kept away from crime books for, like, ten years.
I spent most of my teenage years in the National Theatre.
I grew up in a family where, through my teenage years, I was expected to go to church on Sunday. It wasn't terribly painful.
I'll never forget a meeting with one publisher where they said, 'We don't publish books for teenage boys; teenage boys don't read.'
I don't consider Los Angeles home anymore; ultimately, it was pretty negative, but I did spend my formative years in the Valley and all around L.A. proper. Through my teenage years and into my young adulthood, up until the age of 30, I spent a good amount of time there.
My mom's mission my entire teenage years was just to save my life.
The relationship between parents and children who live together is a growing one, and it shifts every day, especially during the teenage years.
Teenage years are hard. And, having taught high school for a number of years, I think they're particularly hard on teenage girls. The most self-conscious human beings on the planet are teenage girls.
In my teenage years, there was a lot of angst going on.
I missed out on my teenage years. I led a sheltered life. I was practicing scales instead of playing football.
You might say I was a passive atheist through my teenage years.
No one escapes the teenage years without a lot of challenges. I had many. I was awkward. Petrified of boys.
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