You see misery, you see misfortune, you see pain, you see suffering. It's all part of the fatalistic way of looking at life.
I think the thing to do is enjoy the ride while you're on it.
I like the challenge of trying different things and wondering whether it's going to work or whether I'm going to fall flat on my face.
I think when you are young, you are hoping that this person will be the right one. The one you are going to be in love with forever, but sometimes you want that so much, you create something that isn't really there.
If there's a message to pass to people, I'd say that it's normal to be different from others, it's good to differ from one another, and we'd better look at ourselves first before we start criticising someone who looks, acts, speaks different or has a different skin colour. I'd like to continue, even at a minimal level, what John Lennon had started. If I could do as much as a bit of what he did, if I could contribute to the elimination of hatred among us, that would be a great deal.
France, and the whole of Europe have a great culture and an amazing history. Most important thing though is that people there know how to live! In America they've forgotten all about it. I'm afraid that the American culture is a disaster.
They (the people of Puerto Rico) are truly the sweetest people on earth.
I haven't known life to be happier.
It's a small world. It keeps recrossing itself.
If you deeply appreciate and love what creative people do and how they think, which is usually in unpredictable and irrational ways, then you can start to understand them. And finally, you can see inside their minds and DNA.
You cannot imagine at all how much you interest God; He is interested in you as if there were no one else on earth.